AbstractThe introduction of the electron microscope to the study of the biological materials in the second half of the last century has dramatically expanded our view and understanding of the inner workings of cells by enabling the discovery and study of subcellular organelles. A population of flask-shaped or spherical invaginations of the plasma membrane were described and named plasmalemmal vesicles or caveolae. Until the discovery of caveolin-1 as their first molecular marker in early 1990s, the study of caveolae was the exclusive domain of electron microscopists that demonstrated caveolae at different surface densities in most mammalian cells with few exceptions. Electron microscopy techniques in combination with other approaches have a...
Caveolae are specialised plasma membrane microdomains enriched in glycosphingolipids, cholesterol an...
Caveolae are Ω-shaped invaginations of the plasma membrane, found in many types of cells[1]. Cave-ol...
Almost 50 years after the first sighting of small pits that covered the surface of mammalian cells, ...
AbstractThe introduction of the electron microscope to the study of the biological materials in the ...
The plasma membrane is more than a simple delimitation of the boundary of the cell but is a dynamic ...
Caveolae are one of the most abundant and striking features of the plasma membrane of many mammalian...
Caveolae, flask-shaped invaginations of the plasma membrane, are a striking feature of many mammalia...
The plasma membrane of eukaryotic cells is not a simple sheet of lipids and proteins but is differen...
intracellulares, surface vesicles, surface microvesi-cles, plasmalemmal vesicles, micropinocytotic v...
Originally described in the 1950s caveolae are morphologically identifiable as small omega-shaped pl...
Caveolae are specialized plasma membrane subdomains visualized more than 50 years ago as cave-like i...
Caveolae are small, functionally important membrane invaginations found on the surface of many diffe...
Abstract: Since its inception, electron microscopy (EM) has revealed that cellular membranes are org...
Caveolae are specialized membrane domains that are crucial for the correct function of endothelial c...
Caveolae are 50-100 nm invaginations of the plasma membrane that have captured the interest of scien...
Caveolae are specialised plasma membrane microdomains enriched in glycosphingolipids, cholesterol an...
Caveolae are Ω-shaped invaginations of the plasma membrane, found in many types of cells[1]. Cave-ol...
Almost 50 years after the first sighting of small pits that covered the surface of mammalian cells, ...
AbstractThe introduction of the electron microscope to the study of the biological materials in the ...
The plasma membrane is more than a simple delimitation of the boundary of the cell but is a dynamic ...
Caveolae are one of the most abundant and striking features of the plasma membrane of many mammalian...
Caveolae, flask-shaped invaginations of the plasma membrane, are a striking feature of many mammalia...
The plasma membrane of eukaryotic cells is not a simple sheet of lipids and proteins but is differen...
intracellulares, surface vesicles, surface microvesi-cles, plasmalemmal vesicles, micropinocytotic v...
Originally described in the 1950s caveolae are morphologically identifiable as small omega-shaped pl...
Caveolae are specialized plasma membrane subdomains visualized more than 50 years ago as cave-like i...
Caveolae are small, functionally important membrane invaginations found on the surface of many diffe...
Abstract: Since its inception, electron microscopy (EM) has revealed that cellular membranes are org...
Caveolae are specialized membrane domains that are crucial for the correct function of endothelial c...
Caveolae are 50-100 nm invaginations of the plasma membrane that have captured the interest of scien...
Caveolae are specialised plasma membrane microdomains enriched in glycosphingolipids, cholesterol an...
Caveolae are Ω-shaped invaginations of the plasma membrane, found in many types of cells[1]. Cave-ol...
Almost 50 years after the first sighting of small pits that covered the surface of mammalian cells, ...