In the video - The Golgi Apparatus and Protein Processing - I look at the role of the Golgi in processing proteins.
The Golgi apparatus (possibly my favourite organelle) was discovered by Camillo Golgi in 1898 and confirmed in the 1950s.
Structurally, the Golgi resembles a stack of plates, and it has three distinct regions: the cis face (closest to the ER), the medial Golgi, and the trans face (furthest from the ER). The primary function of the Golgi is to process and sort proteins received from the ER, directing them to lysosomes, endosomes, or the plasma membrane.
There are two main theories for how the Golgi operates:
- Vesicle Transport Model - proteins move to the machinery.
- Cisternal Maturation Model - machinery moves to the proteins.
Upon leaving the Golgi, proteins can enter one of two pathways:
- Constitutive secretory pathway - direct to the cell surface)
- Regulated secretory pathway - via secretory vesicles and requires a signal for the vesicles to traffic further.
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Additional Reading
The video was produced with help from the following resources:
- 📗 - The Biosciences Glossary
- 📗 - Molecular Biology of the Cell (Alberts) - (affiliate link)
- 📗 - Molecular Cell Biology (Lodish) - (affiliate link)
- 📗 - Biochemistry (Stryer) - (affiliate link)