About: I-cell

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Fritz Heinrich Jakob Lewy, a German-American neurologist, first identified and described inclusions in the brain cells of patients with Parkinson’s disease and published his findings in the Lewandowsky’s Handbook of Neurology in 1912. I-cells also called inclusion cells are abnormal fibroblasts having a large number of dark inclusions in the cytoplasm of the cell (mainly in the central area). They are metabolically inactive structures of a cell and are not enclosed by a membrane. The inclusions are of various fats, proteins, carbohydrates, pigments, excretory products, crystals, and other insolubles. They are found in the cytoplasm of a cell in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes. They are seen in Mucolipidosis II, and Mucolipidosis III, also called inclusion-cell or I-cell disease where lysos

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  • خلايا-I وتسمى أيضاً الخلايا المشتملة أو الخلايا المضمنة وهي خلايا ليفية يافعة غير طبيعية، تحتوي على عدد كبير من المشتملات الداكنة في سيتوبلازم الخلية (وخصوصاً في المنطقة الوسطى)، وتتكون المشتملات من مختلف الدهون والبروتينات والكربوهيدرات والأصباغ ومواد أخرى غير قابلة للذوبان، وتوجد في الداء الشحمي المخاطي الثاني. (ar)
  • Fritz Heinrich Jakob Lewy, a German-American neurologist, first identified and described inclusions in the brain cells of patients with Parkinson’s disease and published his findings in the Lewandowsky’s Handbook of Neurology in 1912. I-cells also called inclusion cells are abnormal fibroblasts having a large number of dark inclusions in the cytoplasm of the cell (mainly in the central area). They are metabolically inactive structures of a cell and are not enclosed by a membrane. The inclusions are of various fats, proteins, carbohydrates, pigments, excretory products, crystals, and other insolubles. They are found in the cytoplasm of a cell in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes. They are seen in Mucolipidosis II, and Mucolipidosis III, also called inclusion-cell or I-cell disease where lysosomal enzyme transport and storage is affected. (en)
  • Le cellule I, chiamate anche cellule di inclusione, sono fibroblasti anormali con un elevato numero di inclusioni scure nel citoplasma della cellula (principalmente nell'area centrale). Le inclusioni sono dovute a diversi tipi di lipidi, proteine, carboidrati, pigmenti e altre sostanze insolubili. Si riscontrano nella . (it)
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  • خلايا-I وتسمى أيضاً الخلايا المشتملة أو الخلايا المضمنة وهي خلايا ليفية يافعة غير طبيعية، تحتوي على عدد كبير من المشتملات الداكنة في سيتوبلازم الخلية (وخصوصاً في المنطقة الوسطى)، وتتكون المشتملات من مختلف الدهون والبروتينات والكربوهيدرات والأصباغ ومواد أخرى غير قابلة للذوبان، وتوجد في الداء الشحمي المخاطي الثاني. (ar)
  • Le cellule I, chiamate anche cellule di inclusione, sono fibroblasti anormali con un elevato numero di inclusioni scure nel citoplasma della cellula (principalmente nell'area centrale). Le inclusioni sono dovute a diversi tipi di lipidi, proteine, carboidrati, pigmenti e altre sostanze insolubili. Si riscontrano nella . (it)
  • Fritz Heinrich Jakob Lewy, a German-American neurologist, first identified and described inclusions in the brain cells of patients with Parkinson’s disease and published his findings in the Lewandowsky’s Handbook of Neurology in 1912. I-cells also called inclusion cells are abnormal fibroblasts having a large number of dark inclusions in the cytoplasm of the cell (mainly in the central area). They are metabolically inactive structures of a cell and are not enclosed by a membrane. The inclusions are of various fats, proteins, carbohydrates, pigments, excretory products, crystals, and other insolubles. They are found in the cytoplasm of a cell in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes. They are seen in Mucolipidosis II, and Mucolipidosis III, also called inclusion-cell or I-cell disease where lysos (en)
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  • خلية-I (ar)
  • I-cell (en)
  • Cellule I (it)
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