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In cell biology, a vesicle is a relatively small and
enclosed compartment, separated from the cytosol by at least one lipid bilayer. Vesicles store, transport, or digest cellular products and wastes.
This biomembrane enclosing the vesicle is the same as that of the outer (cellular) membrane. They are a basic tool of the cell
to organize its metabolism. Vesicles are used for digestive purposes, as
transport vessels, as an enzyme storage, and as chemical reaction chambers. Many
vesicles are made in the Golgi apparatus, but also in the endoplasmic reticulum, or are made from parts of the plasma membrane.
Lysosomes (membrane-bound digestive vesicles) can digest macromolecules (break
them down to small compounds) that were taken in from the outside of the cell by an endocytic vesicle. This is the basic way for
a cell to feed (except for photosynthesis in plants, which don't have
lysosomes). The membrane of the lysosome is impermeable for lysozyme, the enzyme
that does the actual digestion, to protect the cell interior from being digested by its own enzyme. Lysosomes are made in the
Golgi apparatus.
Transport vesicles
Transport vesicles can move molecules between locations inside the cell, e.g., proteins from the endoplasmic reticulum to the Golgi apparatus, and from there to
the outer cell membrane, where they are secreted. They do this by budding off from one compartment and joining to another.
Anterograde transport vesicles
These are foreward moving vesicles.
Retrograde transport vesicles
These vesicles move from later to earlier cisterna.
Vesicles can be used as reaction chambers for chemical reactions that could damage the cell if they would occur in the
cytosol. For example, peroxisomes are detoxifiers of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), a toxic byproduct of cell
metabolism. Large storage vesicles are known as vacuoles.
Mechanisms
Assembly of a protein coat drives vesicle formation and selection of cargo molecules.
Vesicle coat
The vesicle coat serves to sculpt the curvature of a donor membrane, and to select specific proteins as cargo. It selects
cargo proteins by binding to sorting signals. In this way the vesicle coat clusters selected membrane cargo proteins into nascent vesicle
buds.
See also: micelle
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