different between biogenesis vs omegasome
biogenesis
English
Etymology
From Ancient Greek ????? (bíos, “life”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *g?eyh?- (“to live”)) + ??????? (génesis, “origin, source; manner of birth; creation”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *?énh?tis (“birth; production”)). The words biogenesis and abiogenesis were both coined by English biologist Thomas Henry Huxley (1825–1895) in 1870 (see the quotation).
The word biogenesis was first used by English physiologist and neurologist Henry Charlton Bastian (1837–1915) around 1869 to mean “life-origination or commencement” in an unpublished exchange of correspondence with Irish physicist John Tyndall. However, in an 1871 book, Bastian announced he was adopting a new term, archebiosis, because of the confusion that might be caused by Huxley’s use of biogenesis with a different meaning.
Equivalent to bio- +? genesis.
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /b???(?)?d??n?s?s/, /ba??-/, /ba?o?-/, /bi??-/, /bi?o?-/, /-n?-/
- (General American) IPA(key): /?baio??d??n?s?s/
- Hyphenation: bi?o?ge?ne?sis
Noun
biogenesis (usually uncountable, plural biogeneses)
- The principle that living organisms are produced only from other living organisms.
- Biosynthesis.
Antonyms
- (principle that living organisms are produced only from other living organisms): abiogenesis
Translations
References
Further reading
- biogenesis on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
biogenesis From the web:
- what's biogenesis mean
- what is biogenesis theory
- what does biogenesis mean
- what is biogenesis in biology
- what is biogenesis class 9
- what is biogenesis and abiogenesis
- what is biogenesis of mitochondria
- what is biogenesis quizlet
omegasome
English
Etymology
omega +? -some, from the similarity in shape to the letter omega.
Noun
omegasome (plural omegasomes)
- A cup-shaped protrusion from the endoplasmic reticulum that serves as a platform for autophagosome biogenesis in mammalian cells.
omegasome From the web:
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