yes
Granule cells are the only excitatory neurons in the cerebellar cortex. They receive input from mossy fibers and synapse onto Purkinje cells and Golgi cells.
im fairly certain they were all discovered by different people. perhaps you are specifically talking about the Golgi apparatus which was discovered by Camillo Golgi? that's the only organelle named after its discoverer.
Neurons were first discovered in the late 19th century, with significant contributions from scientists like Camillo Golgi and Santiago Ramón y Cajal. Golgi developed a staining technique in 1873 that allowed for the visualization of individual nerve cells, while Cajal, in the 1890s, provided detailed descriptions of their structure and proposed the neuron doctrine, which established neurons as the basic building blocks of the nervous system. Their combined work laid the foundation for modern neuroscience.
in molecular layer = basket + stellate neuronsin purkinje cell layer = cell bodies of purkinje neuronsin granule cell layer = cell bodies of granule + Golgi type 2 neurons
For the flagellum....i guess u could do a motor, or an engine from a car. For Golgi apparatus...you could do like a mail room... For the Golgi Apparatus, I would put Fedex because they basically revieve mail and redistribute it. Or li
there are alot of Golgi apparatuses in stomach cells because the protein in the apparatuses help to digest and gives you the protein in them :P
small particles on surfaces
there are alot of Golgi apparatuses in stomach cells because the protein in the apparatuses help to digest and gives you the protein in them :P
Granule cells are the only excitatory neurons in the cerebellar cortex. They receive input from mossy fibers and synapse onto Purkinje cells and Golgi cells.
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.
im fairly certain they were all discovered by different people. perhaps you are specifically talking about the Golgi apparatus which was discovered by Camillo Golgi? that's the only organelle named after its discoverer.
always wash d apparatuses after you used it
The smallest cells in the human body are the Granule/Golgi neurons in the granular layer (innermost layer of grey matter) of Cerebellum.
Neurons were first discovered in the late 19th century, with significant contributions from scientists like Camillo Golgi and Santiago Ramón y Cajal. Golgi developed a staining technique in 1873 that allowed for the visualization of individual nerve cells, while Cajal, in the 1890s, provided detailed descriptions of their structure and proposed the neuron doctrine, which established neurons as the basic building blocks of the nervous system. Their combined work laid the foundation for modern neuroscience.
A chemical laboratory cannot exist now without apparatuses.
in molecular layer = basket + stellate neuronsin purkinje cell layer = cell bodies of purkinje neuronsin granule cell layer = cell bodies of granule + Golgi type 2 neurons
For the flagellum....i guess u could do a motor, or an engine from a car. For Golgi apparatus...you could do like a mail room... For the Golgi Apparatus, I would put Fedex because they basically revieve mail and redistribute it. Or li