[
US
/ˈvɛzɪkəɫ/
]
NOUN
- a small anatomically normal sac or bladderlike structure (especially one containing fluid)
How To Use vesicle In A Sentence
- Boll W, Griffin AM, Kirchhausen T (2006) A burst of auxilin recruitment determines the onset of clathrin-coated vesicle uncoating. PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles
- Reaction product of acid phosphatase is localized primarily in the small vacuoles, and occasionally in the dictyosome cisternae and vesicles of the golgi body.
- Starting with DNA surrounded by lipid vesicles and DNA binding proteins, a double membrane may spontaneously self-assemble around the DNA, a process which happens at every division in telophase. Albert de Roos: A design hypothesis for the evolution of the nucleus
- At nerve terminals, stimulus-evoked calcium entry triggers transmitter release through rapid, regulated exocytosis of readily releasable synaptic vesicles.
- A variety of minerals were deposited in the hollow vesicles.
- There is a common uro-genital duct, into which a seminal vesicle, which is especially large in early spring, opens. Text Book of Biology, Part 1: Vertebrata
- Aileron: the scale covering the base of primaries in some insects; see tegulae in Diptera = alula and squama, q.v. Air-sacs or vesicles: pouch-like expansions of tracheal tubes in heavy insects, capable of inflation and supposed to lessen specific gravity. Explanation of Terms Used in Entomology
- To eliminate unfused lipid vesicles, the internal contents of the assembly were then rinsed with approximately 10 internal volumes of the solution used to suspend the vesicles.
- The wild type molecule at the cell surface cycles from the membrane to sacs within the cell interior called endocytic vesicles where it may be degraded.
- Secretory cells either contain many small vacuoles or a single larger vacuole with flocculent contents and numerous vesicles.