Also called a Golgi Apparatus, Golgi Body or dictyosome. A special set of membranous sacs, which collects, modifies and distributes the substances made by the ER (e.g. proteins). The substances fill the sacs, which gradually swell up at their outside edges until pieces "pinch off". These pieces, called vesicles then travel out of the cell via the cytoplasm and cell membrane.
Yes, they are also known as Golgi complexes.
Bound ribosomes help synthesize digestive enzymes, which are then transported to the Golgi complex for further modification and packaging. The Golgi complex then packages the enzymes into vesicles for secretion or for use within the cell. This process results in an abundance of bound ribosomes and Golgi complexes in cells that need high levels of digestive enzymes for their functions.
Mitochondria are mainly found in animal cells. They are responsible for producing energy in the form of ATP through cellular respiration. Lysosomes, ribosomes, and Golgi complexes are also present in animal cells, but mitochondria are specifically known for their energy production role.
Golgi vesicles can be compared to delivery trucks in a city, transporting and delivering proteins and lipids to different parts of the cell. Just like how trucks carry goods from a warehouse to various stores, Golgi vesicles transport molecules from the Golgi apparatus to different cellular destinations.
The Golgi apparatus (also called Golgi complex) is an organelle of great importance in the processing of proteins to be secreted from the cell. Since cells of the stomach secrete a large volume of digestive proteins (eg, pepsinogen from gastric chief cells), they must have high secretory capacity. Having many Golgi complexes allows for this high capacity.
Eukaryotic cells possess membrane-bound organelles, including mitochondria and Golgi complexes. Mitochondria are responsible for energy production through cellular respiration, while the Golgi complex plays a crucial role in modifying, sorting, and packaging proteins and lipids for secretion or delivery to other organelles. These organelles contribute to the compartmentalization of cellular processes, allowing for greater efficiency and specialization within the cell. In contrast, prokaryotic cells lack these structures.
A cell typically has one Golgi complex, which consists of a series of flattened, membrane-bound sacs known as cisternae. These cisternae are responsible for modifying, sorting, and packaging proteins and lipids for transport within and outside the cell.
The Golgi complex is also known as Golgi apparatus, Golgi body or Golgi. It is found in most eukaryotic cells. The Golgi complex was identified by the Italian physician Camillo Golgi in 1897.
Golgi, or you can say Golgi body or the Golgi apparatus
The Golgi apparatus and endoplasmic reticulum Golgi apparatus.
There are two different types of outer orbital complexes. These two type of complexes are called low-spin or spin-paired complexes.
Complexes is the plural of complex