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membrane
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   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.06 sec.

membrane

In living things, a continuous layer, made up principally of fat molecules, that encloses a cell or organelles within a cell. Small molecules, such as water and sugars, can pass through the cell membrane by diffusion. Large molecules, such as proteins, are transported across the membrane via special channels, a process often involving energy input. The Golgi apparatus within the cell is thought to produce certain membranes.

In cell organelles, enzymes may be attached to the membrane at specific positions, often alongside other enzymes involved in the same process, like workers at a conveyor belt. Thus membranes help to make cellular processes more efficient.


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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
The TIMP3 mutations may promote excessive growth of blood vessels through Bruch's membrane, which lies below the retina, they speculate.
Campochiaro and his colleagues at Johns Hopkins conducted experiments on transgenic mice with CNV caused by an over expression of vascular endothelial growth factor in the retina and mice with laser-induced rupture of Bruch's membrane.
The retina and Bruch's membrane (the tissue behind the retina that separates it from the blood vessels of the choroids) are two of the tissues that stretch and become thin.
 
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