When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Flagellum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flagellum

    The flagellum in archaea is called the archaellum to note its difference from the bacterial flagellum. [7] [8] Eukaryotic flagella and cilia are identical in structure but have different lengths and functions. [9] Prokaryotic fimbriae and pili are smaller, and thinner appendages, with different functions. Cilia are attached to the surface of ...

  3. Undulipodium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Undulipodium

    An undulipodium or undulopodium (Greek: "swinging foot"; plural undulipodia), or a 9+2 organelle is a motile filamentous extracellular projection of eukaryotic cells.It is basically synonymous to flagella and cilia which are differing terms for similar molecular structures used on different types of cells, and usually correspond to different waveforms.

  4. Axoneme - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Axoneme

    Inside a cilium and a flagellum is a microtubule-based cytoskeleton called the axoneme. The axoneme of a primary cilium typically has a ring of nine outer microtubule doublets (called a 9+0 axoneme), and the axoneme of a motile cilium has two central microtubules in addition to the nine outer doublets (called a 9+2 axoneme).

  5. Cytoskeleton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cytoskeleton

    The latter formation is commonly referred to as a "9+2" arrangement, wherein each doublet is connected to another by the protein dynein. As both flagella and cilia are structural components of the cell, and are maintained by microtubules, they can be considered part of the cytoskeleton. There are two types of cilia: motile and non-motile cilia.

  6. Basal body - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basal_body

    Schematic of the eukaryotic flagellum. 1-axoneme, 2-cell membrane, 3-IFT (Intraflagellar transport), 4-Basal body, 5-Cross section of flagellum, 6-Triplets of microtubules of basal body. Longitudinal section through the flagella area in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. In the cell apex is the basal body that is the anchoring site for a flagellum.

  7. Microtubule organizing center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microtubule_organizing_center

    Microtubule arrangement in a 9+2 axoneme of bronchiolar cilia. Microtubule-organizing centers function as the site where microtubule formation begins, as well as a location where free-ends of microtubules attract to. [2] Within the cells, microtubule-organizing centers can take on many different forms.

  8. Bacterial cell structure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bacterial_cell_structure

    The bacterial DNA is not packaged using histones to form chromatin as in eukaryotes but instead exists as a highly compact supercoiled structure, the precise nature of which remains unclear. [6] Most bacterial chromosomes are circular, although some examples of linear chromosomes exist (e.g. Borrelia burgdorferi). Usually, a single bacterial ...

  9. Ciliogenesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ciliogenesis

    Primary cilia contain nine doublet microtubules arranged as a cylinder in their axenome and are denoted as a 9+0 pattern. [2] Motile cilia are denoted as a 9+2 pattern because they contain two extra microtubules in the center of the cylinder that forms the axenome. [2] Due to differences between primary and motile cilia, differences are seen in ...