saclike การใช้
- Bursitis is an inflammation of the bursa, a saclike cavity located between the tendon and the bone.
- A maroon / liver-brown saclike growth emerges and enlarges like a balloon being gently filled with air.
- Alveolar glands have a saclike secretory portion, thus are also termed "'saccular glands " '.
- They described this membrane-like barrier as a " saclike structure surrounded by a membrane and containing acid phosphatase ."
- Researchers have shown that a rootless tropical plant shelters ants in its saclike leaves because the insects in turn supply it with key nutrients.
- Tiny saclike containers, known as vesicles, ferry proteins and other vital products through the interior of cells from one site to another.
- Adults have few follicles, the saclike structures in the skin in which hairs develop, and the scant follicles they do have lack hair.
- The base of the flower is a puffy saclike calyx of sepals which is ribbed, thin and membranous between the ribs and purple to purple spotted in color.
- Though she made her name with sensuous business outfits for the middle-aged working woman, she has since designed several collections that were amorphous, saclike and poorly received.
- The proteins that will become dragline silk are secreted by cells on the walls of a long, saclike gland, from which they are funneled as a watery solution into a long, looping duct.
- Kathleen Treseder, a recent graduate who is now a doctoral student at Stanford University, working with Dr . James R . Ehleringer and Dr . Diane W . Davidson, retrieved saclike leaves from Dischidia plants growing on trees in Malaysia for the analysis.
- This led to a hypothesis that a membrane-like barrier restricted rapid access of the enzyme to its substrate, so that the enzymes were able to diffuse after a few days . They described the membrane-like barrier as a " saclike structure surrounded by a membrane and containing acid phosphatase . " It was also obvious that an unrelated enzyme from the cell fraction came from a membranous fractions which were definitely cell organelles, and in 1955 de Duve named them " lysosomes " to reflect their digestive properties.