Vesicle Formation (DP IB Biology)
Revision Note
Vesicles in Cells
Vesicles are membrane-bound sacs used for transport and storage
There are many sorts of vesicles including:
Peroxisomes - these contain enzymes which digest fatty acids
Lysosomes - these contain lytic enzymes which digest cellular waste or harmful substances
Transport vesicles - these are used to move various molecules within the cell
Secretory vesicles - these are responsible for transporting substances out of the cell via exocytosis
Role of Clathrin
Clathrins are proteins that help with the formation of vesicles
They line the vesicles which are transporting molecules between membrane-bound compartments
The following process takes place:
A clathrin coated pit is formed on the surface of the cell membrane
Receptor proteins on the cell surface bind to the target molecules
Once enough target molecule are attached, cytoskeleton proteins help the clathrin pit to deepen and eventually seal off, trapping the target molecules inside
A vesicle is now formed
Vesicle formation diagram
Clathrin proteins play an important role in the formation of vesicles
Examiner Tips and Tricks
Vesicles are not the same as vacuoles. Vacuoles are larger than vesicles and the membrane of a vacuole cannot fuse with the membranes of other cellular components, like the membrane of vesicles can
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