autophagic vacuole
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vacuole — 1. A minute space in any tissue. 2. A clear space in the substance of a cell, sometimes degenerative in character, sometimes surrounding an englobed foreign body and serving as a temporary cell stomach for the digestion of the … Medical dictionary
Autophagy — This article is about the cellular process. For other uses, see Autophagy (disambiguation). (A) Diagram of autophagy; (B) Electron micrograph of autophagic structures in the fatbody of a fruit fly larva; (C) Fluorescently labeled autophagosomes… … Wikipedia
Autophagy (cellular) — In cell biology, autophagy, or autophagocytosis, is a catabolic process involving the degradation of a cell s own components through the lysosomal machinery. It is a tightly regulated process that plays a normal part in cell growth, development,… … Wikipedia
CLN3 — Ceroid lipofuscinosis, neuronal 3 Identifiers Symbols CLN3; BTS; JNCL; MGC102840 External IDs … Wikipedia
autophagolysosome — The digestive vacuole of autophagy that results from the fusion of a primary lysosome with an autophagic vacuole. * * * au·to·phago·ly·so·some (aw″to fag″ə liґsə sōm) autolysosome … Medical dictionary
autophagosome — au·to·phago·some (aw″to fagґə sōm) [auto + phagosome] an intracytoplasmic vacuole containing elements of the cell s own cytoplasm, formed by macroautophagy; it fuses with a primary lysosome to form an autolysosome, subjecting its… … Medical dictionary
NBR1 — Neighbor of BRCA1 gene 1 PDB rendering based on 1wj6 … Wikipedia
amphisome — noun An autophagic vacuole formed by fusion of an autophagosome and an endosome … Wiktionary
cytolysosome — A variety of secondary lysosome that contains the remnants of mitochondria, ribosomes, or other organelles. SYN: autophagic vacuole. * * * cy·to·ly·so·some (si″to liґso sōm) autophagosome … Medical dictionary
Autophagy network — consists of enzymes and substrates involved in the degradation of a cell s own components. Network membersThe Autophagy network members (gene name and aliases) as published in the last 500 newest PubMed entries (see below) are depicted… … Wikipedia