Biology, asked by vickysurpur60, 5 months ago

Number of microtubules in Centrosome​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1

The centrosome, or "microtubule-organizing center" is made up of two centrioles arranged perpendicular to each other. Each centriole is made up of a ring of 9 groups of 3 fused microtubules. Microtubules are produced at the centrosome and radiate out from it.

Answered by AnkitaSahni
0

The 'centriole' is the foremost recognizable structure in all of 'biology'. '9 triplet' 'microtubules' are elegantly organized into a 'cylinder' with a diameter of roughly '250 nm' and a length starting from a 'hundred and fifty to five hundred nm', looking at the 'cell kind'.

  • 'Microtubules' produce a 'spindle', and that is very the 'structural component' of the cell that coordinates the cells moving removed from one another.
  • And therefore the 'centrosomes' organize the 'microtubules', thus it's known as the 'microtubules' containing the center.
  • The 'minus ends' of 'microtubules' are 'anchored' within the 'centrosome'. In 'interphase' cells, the 'centrosome' is found close to the 'nucleus' and 'microtubules' extend outward to the 'cell boundary'.

#SPJ3

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