They are 'pinched off' somewhat like a doing that with very soft clay. These are now called vesicles. And these vesicles are pulled off the membranes and travel to where they are needed.
The nucleus is not a common destination for small vesicles that bud off the Golgi apparatus. Small vesicles from the Golgi apparatus typically transport molecules to various cellular destinations such as the plasma membrane, lysosomes, or endosomes, but they do not typically transport molecules to the nucleus.
The Golgi body consists of [stacked membrane-bound flattened sacs] Smooth Endoplasmic Reticulum (SER), & the Golgi body is surrounded by numerous small membrane-bound vesicles all Inbound to the Golgi Apparatus, as the primary concern of the Golgi 'body' is the Export of Cellular Constructs.
i would use something thet represents the function
Proteins are transported from the endoplasmic reticulum to the Golgi apparatus through small vesicles that bud off from the ER and fuse with the Golgi membrane. This process is called vesicular transport and is essential for the proper functioning of the cell.
Incoming transport vesicles of the Golgi apparatus are vesicles that bud off from the endoplasmic reticulum and bring proteins and lipids to the Golgi apparatus for further processing and sorting. These vesicles fuse with the cis-Golgi network, allowing their contents to enter the Golgi stack for processing.
No, the Golgi apparatus does not form from vesicles budded off from other parts of the cell. The Golgi apparatus is made up of a series of flattened membrane-bound sacs called cisternae that are formed by the fusion of vesicles coming from the endoplasmic reticulum.
The synthesized enzymes in the rough endoplasmic reticulum are released from Golgi apparatus in small vesicles and fused with acidic vesicles. These acidic vesicles are called endosomes and they become lysosomes.
vescies
The Golgi produces vesicles - small membrane bound structures - filled with enzymes, lipds or glycoproteins that diffuse through the cytoplasm and fuse with the cell membrane and leave the cell by exocytosis. Link http://www.coursework.info/AS_and_A_Level/Biology/Exchange__Transport___Reproduction/Function_of_the_Golgi_Body_L61042.html
Golgi Apparatus is a complex protoplasmic structure consisting of membrane bound, fluid filled parallel, flattened, curving arched intercommunicating cisternae & many peripherial tubules vesicles & vacules which take part in membrane formation secretion & production of complex biochemicals.The Golgi apparatus, or Golgi body, is an organelle usually found in most eukaryotic cells. It has a few different functions, but its main one is to package and process proteins before the ends of the apparatus are 'pinched' off and small spheres containing the proteins and such (lysosomes) travel to the edge of the cell to excrete it's contents.
to be safety
It is responsible for modifying, packaging, and distributing proteins and other macromolecules. Proteins are assembled by the ribosomes of the rough ER, and then packaged into little parts of the ER membrane. These membrane packages pinch off, creating a small spherical pouch called a vesicle. The vesicles then make their way through the cytosol (the fluid inside the cell), to the nearby Golgi apparatus. Proteins enter the Golgi body through the cis face when their vesicle fuses with the Golgi membrane and opens up, emptying its contents into the cisternae. From there, they begin to make their way through each section of the Golgi apparatus until they reach the trans face. Along the way, they are processed based on their ultimate function and destination.