Golgi - Medicow
About us  |  Why use us?  |  Press  |  Contact us

 

Topic: Golgi



  
 Life and Discoveries of Camillo Golgi
However, convinced that theories had to be supported by facts, Golgi soon abandoned psychiatry and concentrated on the experimental study of the structure of the nervous system.
Golgi was an exceptionally acute and prolific investigator, who provided a number of outstanding observations.
Although he misinterpreted the overall view of the organization of the nervous system, he contributed highly to the modern knowledge of its structure.
http://nobelprize.org/medicine/articles/golgi

  
 Maintenance of Golgi structure and function depends on the integrity of ER export -- Ward et al. 155 (4): 557 -- The ...
BFA bodies: a subcompartment of the endoplasmic reticulum.
indicated that the clustered structures are not of Golgi origin.
Recycling of Golgi-resident glycosyltransferases through the ER reveals a novel pathway and provides an explanation for nocodazole-induced Golgi scattering.
http://www.jcb.org/cgi/content/full/155/4/557

  
 Golgi Readings 421
ATP is involved but the transducing mechanisms and critical control points remain undefined.
The cisternae may communicate with one another by slender channels at places along their contiguous surfaces.
The Golgi complex is often juxtanuclear and may partially enclose the centrioles.
http://www.bio.utk.edu/kennedy/Golgireadings421.htm

  
 Targeting of Active Sialyltransferase to the Plant Golgi Apparatus -- Wee et al. 10 (10): 1759 -- THE PLANT CELL
Duksin, D., and Mahoney, W.C. (1982) Relationship of the structure and biological activity of the natural homologues of tunicamycin.
This drug has variable effects on the morphology of the Golgi
It is difficult to interpret our results in terms
http://www.plantcell.org/cgi/content/full/10/10/1759

  
 Myosin Motors and Not Actin Comets Are Mediators of the Actin-based Golgi-to-Endoplasmic Reticulum Protein Transport -- ...
A quantitative analysis of these results is shown in I (the results are the mean of two independent experiments).
severe changes in the Golgi ultrastructure, the cisternae seeming
A quantitative analysis of these results is shown in Q. The results are the mean of two independent experiments; at least 200 cells, randomly chosen, were counted per experimental condition.
http://www.molbiolcell.org/cgi/content/full/14/2/445

  
 NodeWorks - Encyclopedia: Camillo Golgi
Golgi studied medicine at University of Pavia, where he worked in the experimental pathology laboratory under Giulio Bizzozero, who elucidated the properties of bone marrow.
Golgi, together with Santiago Ramón y Cajal, received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1906 for his studies of the structure of the nervous system.
Using his staining technique, Golgi identified the 'internal reticular apparatus' which bears his name, the Golgi apparatus.
http://pedia.nodeworks.com/C/CA/CAM/Camillo_Golgi

  
 AllRefer.com - Camillo Golgi (Medicine, Biography) - Encyclopedia
You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Medicine, Biographies > Camillo Golgi
Golgi taught at the Univ. of Pavia from 1875.
AllRefer.com - Camillo Golgi (Medicine, Biography) - Encyclopedia
http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/G/Golgi-Ca.html

  
 Endoplasmic Reticulum
Distinguish the types of secretory pathways through the Golgi Complex.
As shown in this diagram, rough endoplasmic reticulum may either be vesicular or tubular.
Give a couple of examples of these proteins and their functions in the Rough endoplasmic reticulum
http://cellbio.utmb.edu/cellbio/rer1.htm

  
 golgi
There is thought to be a 'forming face' associated with the RER (see reference to the 'Endomembrane Concept' in the Ultrastructure Notes) and a 'maturing face' of vesicle-producing cisternae.
Each unit of the Golgi Apparatus is composed of a stack of cisternae or sacs which vary in number from 1-2 to perhaps 6-8 dependent on the secretory status of the cell.
At the periphery of these cisternae 'tubular extensions' form, from which the secretory vesicles are budded off.
http://www.lifesci.sussex.ac.uk/home/Julian_Thorpe/golgi.htm

  
 Plant Golgi Stacks in Cytokinesis
These sites of preferential Golgi stack localization are specific for this organelle and largely exclude mitochondria and plastids, although some mitochondria can approach the phragmoplast.
Redistribution of Golgi stacks and other organelles during mitosis and cytokinesis in plant cells
During cytokinesis, this distribution changes and a higher density of Golgi stacks is found near the phragmoplast, the site of cell plate formation.
http://mcdb.colorado.edu/~nebenfue/cytokinesis

  
 Lab Manual Exercise # 1a
Lysosomes fuse with vesicles (small vacuoles) formed by endocytosis.
Golgi vesicles fuse with the cell membrane and discharge their contents into the exterior of the cell through a process called exocytosis.
Golgi Vesicle: A membrane-bound body that forms by "budding" from the Golgi apparatus.
http://waynesword.palomar.edu/lmexer1a.htm

  
 Golgi, Camillo
As a physician at a home for incurables in Abbiategrasso, Italy (1872-75), and with only rudimentary facilities at his disposal, Golgi devised (1873) the silver nitrate method of staining nerve tissue, an invaluable tool in subsequent nerve studies.
The discovery of Golgi cells led the German anatomist Wilhelm von Waldeyer-Hartz to postulate, and Ramón y Cajal to establish, that the nerve cell is the basic structural unit of the nervous system, a critical point in the development of modern neurology.
After his arrival at the University of Pavia (1876), Golgi found and described (1880) the point (now known as the Golgi tendon spindle or Golgi tendon organ) at which sensory nerve
http://www.britannica.com/nobel/micro/239_30.html

  
 The Golgi Apparatus
As they do so, their COPII coat is removed and they may fuse together forming larger vesicles.
The Golgi consists of a stack of membrane-bounded cisternae located between the endoplasmic reticulum and the cell surface.
There is some evidence that in addition to the pinching off and fusing of shuttle vesicles, the cisternae of the Golgi actually migrate themselves; that is, the cis Golgi gradually migrates up the stack becoming a medial and finally a trans Golgi (depicted in the top figure with red arrows).
http://users.rcn.com/jkimball.ma.ultranet/BiologyPages/G/Golgi.html

  
 illustration of cell structure: Golgi complex or apparatus by Russell Kightley Media
name(s) : Golgi complex, Golgi apparatus, Golgi stack, Golgi body, Golgi
Please see all of our pictures at our
These are ferried to the Golgi by transfer vesicles (the little golden spheres underneath the Golgi stack).
http://www.rkm.com.au/CELL/organelles/golgi.html

  
 Benefits of the Luxsauna portable Infrared Sauna and luxury Infrared saunas
Muscle spasms have long been observed to be reduced through the use of heat, be they secondary to underlying skeletal, joint, or neuro-pathological conditions.
The effects produced by each of these mechanisms demonstrated their peak effect within the therapeutic temperature range obtainable with radiant heat.
This result is possibly produced by the combined effect of heat on both primary and secondary afferent from spindle cells and from its effects on Golgi tendon organs.
http://www.luxsauna.com/benefits.php

  
 Golgi Apparatus
Golgi apparatus(sometimes called the Golgi body) is similar to endoplasmic reticulum (ER).
Camillo Golgi discovered these structures in 1898, there was some controversy surrounding this organelle, many biologist did not believe that they really existed.
His name is also associated with two other structures, the Golgi cell and the Golgi tendon organ.
http://www.winterwren.com/apbio/cellorganelles/golgi.html

  
 Golgi apparatus - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The structure and internal function of the Golgi apparatus is quite complex and is the subject of scientific dispute.
After they have been secreted in to the cell the vesicles fuse to the cell membrane and release their contents.
The Golgi apparatus is present in most eukaryotic cells, but tends to be more prominent where there are a lot of substances, such as enzymes, being secreted.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golgi_apparatus

  
 The Golgi Complex
The functional differentiation of the Golgi complex can be studied with the electron microscope with specific techniques that detect enzymes.
These carry Golgi complex processing enzymes and their targeting to this region may be dependent on the low concentration of these processing enzymes.
Carbohydrate groups are attached and any subunits may be joined in these cisternae.
http://www.cytochemistry.net/Cell-biology/golgi.htm

  
 Golgi Apparatus
The golgi body was discovered by the Italian microscopist Camillo Golgi in 1898.
showing golgi apparati; at the right is a diagram which illustrates some aspects of golgi function.
Subsequently, vesicles separate from the cis-most lamella and fuse with the next, and so on, as they move toward the "trans" end of the golgi.
http://tidepool.st.usm.edu/crswr/golgifunct.html

  
 Plant Cells-The Golgi Apparatus
and to see where the Golgi bodies are located in the cell.
They make their way through the stacks of cisternae, and leave through the convex end.
"Golgi Bodies." Natural Toxins Research Initiative at Texas AandM University - Kingsville http://ntri.tamuk.edu/cell/Golgi.html February 2000
http://sun.menloschool.org/~cweaver/cells/c/golgi

  
 Golgi
The vesicles move to the cell membrane and fuse with it.
Click here to see an electron microscope picture of the Golgi bodies and how they work.
You can push your hand right through them and when you pull it out, they fill in the hole again.
http://projects.edtech.sandi.net/miramesa/Organelles/golgi.html

  
 Cell-Biology.com: Cellular Organelles
In fact, biochemical studies have shown that the enzymes present within the Golgi are different at different levels of the membrane stack.
Proteins made within the rough ER bud off in vesicles and are transported to the Golgi where the vesicles fuse with the membrane and the components are further modified, concentrated and packaged by the time they bud off as vesicles on the opposite side of the Golgi.
A single pair of centrioles oriented at a 90 degree angle to one another is found near the Golgi complex in non-dividing cells.
http://www.cell-biology.com/organ.html

  
 Life Science Safari - Golgi Bodies
The little dots or blerbs that pinch off the edges of the Golgi Bodies are called vesicles.
Note : Golgi Bodies are sometimes referred to as Golgi Apparatus.
Golgi bodies are the packaging and secreting organelles of the cell.
http://vilenski.org/science/safari/cellstructure/golgi.html

  
 [No title]
The movement is mediated by transport vesicles which bud from one cisterna to the next.
The golgi apparatus is a structure made up of 4-6 cisternae, or flattened sacs,which function to modify and transport molecules made in the ER.
The golgi is divided into a series of compartments, each containing specific processing enzymes.
http://www-class.unl.edu/bios201a/spring97/group6/golgi.html

  
 The Virtual Cell Textbook - Cell Biology
The golgi body is responsible for packaging proteins for the cell.
Once the proteins are produced by the rough E.R. they pass into the sack like cisternae that are the main part of the golgi body.
These proteins are then squeezed off into the little blebs which drift off into the cytoplasm.
http://personal.tmlp.com/Jimr57/textbook/chapter3/cyto1c.htm

  
 Golgi apparatus
To facilitate this the Golgi itself is divided into three functionally separate areas.
The Golgi is most highly developed in cells which are specialised for secretion such as enzyme releasing cells of the digestive tract.
In many cells there is a single Golgi situated to one side of the nucleus.
http://www.jdaross.mcmail.com/golgi.htm

  
 4e. The Golgi Apparatus [Beyond Books - Life Science: Part 1]
See modern techniques, such as fluorescence and phase contrast, that allow scientists to make discoveries about cells.
Among other achievements, Nobel laureate Camillo Golgi discovered the Golgi body.
An informative discussion of his life and research.
http://www.beyondbooks.com/lif71/4e.asp

  
 The Golgi Cytoskeleton
), actin and many actin binding proteins are known to be associated with the Golgi body (
ARF regulates the association of spectrin with the Golgi membrane (
Bundles microfilaments and is associated with a distinct actin binding complex
http://www.bms.ed.ac.uk/research/others/smaciver/Cyto-Topics/golgi_cytoskeleton.htm

  
 Phish.Net FAQ: Golgi Apparatus
Lyrical meaning: The golgi apparatus (which is not a power structure in the mitochondrion, as errantly reported here earlier) sorts, processes, and ships proteins.
The lyrics "call you lysosome cause you run so fast" and "i saw you with a ticket stub in your hand" may thus mean that the singer has observed proteins which have been so "tagged" by the golgi apparatus, given a ticket and thus made mobile.
It looks a little bit like a stack of pancakes viewed from the side."
http://www.phish.net/faq/golgi.html

  
 DR. CAMILLO GOLGI (1843-1926)
Born in Corteno (Brescia), Italy, Golgi received his education at PAVIA (Italy) and then became assistant to the great Cesar Lombroso at the Institute di Patologia Generale.
His work on pellagra early and psammomas later brought him great recognition but the development of the Golgi method to stain neuroglia achieved for him permanent fame.
Together with Santiago Ramon of Cajal (1852-1934) when he even denunciated, they jointly received the Nobel Prize in 1906.
http://www.uic.edu/depts/mcne/founders/page0040.html

  
 Instruments: Golgi tendon organ
Find golgi tendon organ and more at Lycos Search.
Starware also provides related listings for golgi tendon organ
Starware search is an excellent resource for quality sites on golgi tendon organ and much more!
http://www.musicalinstrumentsindia.com/piano/organ/golgi-tendon-organ.html

  
 Cell Organelles: Golgi Apparatus
The Golgi apparatus is a membrane-bound structure with a single membrane.
It is actually a stack of membrane-bound vesicles that are important in packaging macromolecules for transport elsewhere in the cell.
The stack of larger vesicles is surrounded by numerous smaller vesicles containing those packaged macromolecules.
http://www.cellsalive.com/cells/golgi.htm

  
 Holistic Health Encyclopedia - M
The morphology of macrophages varies among different tissues and between normal and pathologic states, and not all macrophages can be identified by morphology alone.
Among the cells now recognized as macrophages are histiocytes, Kupffer cells, osteoclasts, microglial cells, synovial type A cells, interdigitating cells, and Langerhans cells (in normal tissues) and epithelioid cells and Langerhans-type and foreign-body-type multinucleated giant cells (in inflamed tissues).
However, most macrophages are large cells with a round or indented nucleus, a well-developed Golgi apparatus, abundant endocytotic vacuoles, lysosomes, and phagolysosomes, and a plasma membrane covered with ruffles or microvilli.
http://www.myholistic.com/glossary/M.php3

  
 Biology TutorGig.co.uk Encyclopedia
In biology, a subclass is one level below a class biology class.
In cellular biology, a cell biology cellular product is something manufacturing manufactured by an organelle such as the Golgi apparatus.
http://www.tutorgig.co.uk/encyclopedia/sencyclo.jsp?keywords=Biology

  
 [No title]
Golgi Method and Golgi Gallery by F. Valverde, Instituto Cajal
http://www.mda.org.au/indexfiles.html

 About us   |  Why use us?   |  Press   |  Contact us

 Copyright © 2006 Medicow.com Usage implies agreement with terms.