en:biomolecular_sticks

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BIOMOLECULAR STICKS OR FILAMENTS

The floor of the cell is formed by interlinking filaments which r spread all over the cytoplasm.

These interlinking filaments are called cytoskeleton…. The cytoskeleton can also contract, thereby deforming the cell and the cell's environment and allowing cells to migrate.[5] Moreover, it is involved in many cell signaling pathways: in the uptake of extracellular material (endocytosis),[7] segregates chromosomesduring cellular division,[3] is involved in cytokinesis (the division of a mother cell into two daughter cells),[4]provides a scaffold to organize the contents of the cell in space [5] and for intracellular transport (for example, the movement of vesicles and organelles within the cell);[3] and can be a template for the construction of acell wall.

Eukaryotic cells contain three main kinds of cytoskeletal filaments: microfilaments, microtubules, and intermediate filaments. A large-scale example of an action performed by the cytoskeleton is muscle contraction. During contraction of a muscle, within each muscle cell, myosin molecular motors collectively exert forces on parallel actinfilaments.

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  • en/biomolecular_sticks.1721899511.txt.gz
  • 2024/07/25 09:25
  • brahmantra