Lysosoma

Schema cellulae typicae animalis, partes subcellulares ostendens. Organella: (1) nucleolus, (2) nucleus, (3) ribosoma, (4) vesicula, (5) reticulum endoplasmaticum granulosum, (6) apparatus Golgianus, (7) cytosceletus, (8) reticulum endoplasmaticum leve, (9) mitochondria, (10) vacuola, (11) cytoplasma, (12) lysosoma, (13) centriola.

Lysosoma[1] (-atis, n.) (ex verbis Graecis λύσις solutio et σῶμα corpus compositum) est organellum in cellulis animalibus inventum, quod enzyma hydrolytica includit, ut materias vastas et reliquias cellulares dissolvat. In fermentis? et plantis, vacuola lytica eandem functionem gerunt.[2]

Dysfunctio lysosomatum in morbis neurodegenerativus inventa est[3].

  1. International Committee on Veterinary Histological Nomenclature (1994). Nomina Histologica. Turici/Ithacae/Novi Eboraci.
  2. Samaj J, Read ND, Volkmann D, Menzel D, Baluska F (August 2005). "The endocytic network in plants". Trends Cell Biol. 15 (8): 425–33 
  3. Root J., Merino P., Nuckols A., Johnson M., Kukar T. (Iul 2021). "Lysosome dysfunction as a cause of neurodegenerative diseases: Lessons from frontotemporal dementia and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis". Neurobiology of disease 154: 105360 

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