Skip to content
Category

Organelles

page 2
paraspeckle
frame|An overlay of a fluorescence micrograph (green) onto a DIC image of a HeLa cell expressing a Yellow fluorescent Protein fusion of Paraspeckle Protein 1 (PSP1): 1. cytoplasm; 2. nucleus; 3. nucleolus; 4. paraspeckles In cell biology, a paraspeckle is an irregularly shaped compartment of the cell, approximately 0.2-1 μm in size, found in the nucleus' interchromatin space. First documented in HeLa cells, where there are generally 10-30 per nucleus, Paraspeckles are now known to also exist in all human primary cells, transformed cell lines and tissue sections. Their name is derived from thei
cisterna
A cisterna (: cisternae) is a flattened membrane vesicle found in the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus. Cisternae are an integral part of the packaging and modification processes of proteins occurring in the Golgi.
archaeal-type flagellum
The archaellum (: archaella; formerly archaeal flagellum) is a unique structure on the cell surface of many archaea that allows for swimming motility. The archaellum consists of a rigid helical filament that is attached to the cell membrane by a molecular motor. This molecular motorcomposed of cytosolic, membrane, and pseudo-periplasmic proteinsis responsible for the assembly of the filament and, once assembled, for its rotation. The rotation of the filament propels archaeal cells in liquid medium, in a manner similar to the propeller of a boat. The bacterial analog of the archaellum is the fl
septum
cell wall that forms between two daughter cells as a result of cell division
rhoptry
thumb|Apicomplexan life cycle|Tachyzoites of [[Toxoplasma gondii, transmission electron microscopy. Rhoptries: ro (click to enlarge)]]
Midbody
transient organelle formed after mammalian cell division
JUNQ and IPOD
inclusion bodies for misfolded proteins
Nuclear dimorphism
lamellar granule
secretory organelle
spindle pole body
The microtubule organizing center in fungi; functionally homologous to the animal cell centrosome.