Electron microscopy of lysosome-rich fractions from rat liver

AB Novikoff, H Beaufay, C de Duve - The Journal of biophysical …, 1956 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
AB Novikoff, H Beaufay, C de Duve
The Journal of biophysical and biochemical cytology, 1956ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
A preliminary electron microscope study has revealed the presence in lysosome-rich
fractions, isolated from rat liver, of hitherto undescribed cytoplasmic particles, called" dense
bodies." Approximately 0.37 µ in length, the dense bodies often possess an internal cavity
and external membrane. They contain many electron-dense granules 55 to 77 A, or less, in
diameter. Such dense bodies are also visible in electron micrographs of parenchymatous
cells in liver sections. The correlations between dense bodies and lysosomes are listed, but …
Abstract
A preliminary electron microscope study has revealed the presence in lysosome-rich fractions, isolated from rat liver, of hitherto undescribed cytoplasmic particles, called" dense bodies." Approximately 0.37 µ in length, the dense bodies often possess an internal cavity and external membrane. They contain many electron-dense granules 55 to 77 A, or less, in diameter. Such dense bodies are also visible in electron micrographs of parenchymatous cells in liver sections. The correlations between dense bodies and lysosomes are listed, but until pure preparations are available it is not possible to assert that dense bodies and lysosomes are identical.
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