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Pleomorphism of Lysosomes

  Pleomorphism of Lysosomes Lysosomes show pleomorphism, which means they occur in many different forms according to their functional state. They are not always identical in shape, size, or contents. Their appearance changes depending on whether they are newly formed, involved in digestion, or storing undigested waste materials.  Lysosomes are membrane-bound organelles containing hydrolytic enzymes. These enzymes digest proteins, lipids, carbohydrates, nucleic acids, and other cellular materials. Since lysosomes perform different digestive functions inside the cell, they appear in different structural forms. This property is called pleomorphism.  The main pleomorphic forms of lysosomes are primary lysosomes, secondary lysosomes, autophagic vacuoles, and residual bodies. Primary lysosomes are newly formed lysosomes produced by the Golgi apparatus. They contain inactive hydrolytic enzymes and have not yet taken part in digestion. They are small, spherical vesicles surround...

Isolating mechanisms" available in nature.

Discuss the different “isolating mechanisms" available in nature. The development of differentiation in sympatric populations which are  those inhabit the geographical area, will not interbreed even when kept  together. Such a situation results due to varied factors which are collectively  caused isolating mechanisms. Isolating Mechanisms :  The isolating mechanisms may be purely spatial  or may involve specific mechanisms covering reproductive isolation, which  will operate in sympatric population. Setbbins in his recent book, Processes  of Organic Evolution, classified reproductive isolation mechanisms into two  types: (a) Prezygotic mechanisms :   These prevent contact between species at  the time of active reproductive period or else the fertilization is checked even  if pollination may be effectively brought about. These may be:  (1) Spatial or  ecological isolation,  (2) Seasonal or temporal isolation,  (3)...

MCQ BIOLOGY (SOLVED) FOR NEET & JEE -15 JANUARY 2021

  1. Lyon's hypothesis ­L¡e¢Vl p­‰ pÇf¢LÑa ? (a) h¡lh¢Xl pwMÉ¡                                      (b) ­S­e¢VL LjfÉ¡¢V¢h¢m¢V            (c) ­S­e¢VL CeLjfÉ¡¢V¢h¢m¢V                       (d) ­p­¸VÊ¡¢ju¡­ll AhÙÛ¡e   2. HLSe Ù»£­m¡­Ll ¢nöl klinefelter ­l¡N q­u­Rz ¢nö¢Vl ­c­q h¡lh¢Xl pwMÉ¡ La ? (a) 1      (b) 2      (c) 3      (d) HL¢VJ eu   3. Hexaploid   Nj qm - (a) Triticum turgidum   (b) Triticum aestivum   (c) Triticum monococcum        (d) Triticum durum 4. pÉ¡m¡Ci¡l£ NË¢¿Û­a Ah¢ÙÛa puff h¡ h¡m¢hu¡e£ hmu ­L¡e L¡­kÑl p­‰ pÇf¢L...