yep
Anabolism of proteins is not an essential role of salts in the body. Salts mainly play essential roles in neuromuscular activity, membrane permeability, and secretory activity in the body. They help regulate various physiological processes and maintain homeostasis.
Secretory cells are specialized to produce and release specific substances, such as hormones, enzymes, mucus, or neurotransmitters. They typically have a large amount of rough endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus to support synthesis and packaging of the secretory products. They often have specialized structures like secretory vesicles or ducts to transport and release the secreted substances to their target locations.
Steroid hormones are not stored in the secretory cell after being synthesized. Instead, they are synthesized on demand from cholesterol and released immediately into the bloodstream.
This process is called holocrine secretion, where the entire cell containing the secretory product ruptures to release its contents. This differs from merocrine secretion, where secretory products are released through exocytosis without cell damage.
An adenocyte is a secretory cell of a gland.
yep
They mostly secrete proteins...
Secretory vesicles can form from the Golgi apparatus, which packages proteins and molecules for secretion. These vesicles can also be formed from endosomes that have internalized molecules or from specialized secretory cells in the body. Once formed, secretory vesicles move towards the cell membrane for exocytosis to release their contents outside the cell.
Anabolism of proteins is not an essential role of salts in the body. Salts mainly play essential roles in neuromuscular activity, membrane permeability, and secretory activity in the body. They help regulate various physiological processes and maintain homeostasis.
Golgi Apparatus
Vesicles perform many functions through complex mechanisms that can involve many aspects of cell regulation. Secretory vesicles in particular are specialized vesicles formed in the trans-golgi apparatus for releasing a product (such as molecule or protein) outside the cell. Secretory vesicles are used for exocytosis. Mast cells use secretory vesicles to release histamine which is a molecule involved immune response. Neurotransmitters can also be transmitted in secretory vesicles from nerve cells.
Vesicles perform many functions through complex mechanisms that can involve many aspects of cell regulation. Secretory vesicles in particular are specialized vesicles formed in the trans-golgi apparatus for releasing a product (such as molecule or protein) outside the cell. Secretory vesicles are used for exocytosis. Mast cells use secretory vesicles to release histamine which is a molecule involved immune response. Neurotransmitters can also be transmitted in secretory vesicles from nerve cells.
Secretory cells are specialized to produce and release specific substances, such as hormones, enzymes, mucus, or neurotransmitters. They typically have a large amount of rough endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus to support synthesis and packaging of the secretory products. They often have specialized structures like secretory vesicles or ducts to transport and release the secreted substances to their target locations.
Steroid hormones are not stored in the secretory cell after being synthesized. Instead, they are synthesized on demand from cholesterol and released immediately into the bloodstream.
Golgi body is a cell organell, which is a centre for dipatchment of secretory products
This process is called holocrine secretion, where the entire cell containing the secretory product ruptures to release its contents. This differs from merocrine secretion, where secretory products are released through exocytosis without cell damage.