cytoplasm - Hutchinson encyclopedia article about cytoplasm Printer Friendly
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cytoplasm

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cytoplasm

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Typical plant and animal cell. Plant and animal cells share many structures, such as ribosomes, mitochondria, and chromosomes, but they also have notable differences: plant cells have chloroplasts, a large vacuole, and a cellulose cell wall. Animal cells do not have a rigid cell wall but have an outside cell membrane only.

Part of plant and animal cells outside the nucleus (and outside the large vacuole of plant cells). Strictly speaking, this includes all the organelles (mitochondria, chloroplasts, and so on) and is the area in which most cell activities take place. However, cytoplasm is often used to refer to the jellylike matter in which the organelles are embedded (correctly termed the cytosol). Most of the activities in the cytoplasm are chemical reactions (metabolism), for example, protein synthesis.

In many cells, the cytoplasm is made up of two parts: the ectoplasm (or plasmagel), a dense gelatinous outer layer concerned with cell movement, and the endoplasm (or plasmasol), a more fluid inner part where most of the organelles are found.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
Steroid hormones pass directly from the bloodstream to the cytoplasm, where they induce changes in the receptor proteins, enable movement into the nucleus, and activate specific genes.
Histologically, the cells resemble chief cells and are uniform, with clear to amphophilic cytoplasm surrounding small, hyperchromatic nuclei (figure, B).
This fusion of the nuclei in the cytoplasm of the ovum, he continued, is what results in creation of a new individual or individuals, in the case of twins.
 
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