Weibel-palade Body
In
physiology
,
Weibel-Palade bodies
are
organelles
in the
endothelium
, the cells lining all
blood vessels
. They are
named after
the two
scientists
who first described them in
1964
. The main constituent of Weibel-Palade bodies is
von Willebrand factor
(vWF), a multimeric
protein
involved in
blood
coagulation
.
Production
Multimeric vWF is assembled in the
Golgi apparatus
from vWF dimers. The Golgi then buds off vesicles, covered in a
lipid bilayer
, which consist almost exclusively of vWF. The only parallel organelle in physiology is the
alpha
granule of
platelets
, which also contains vWF. Weibel-Palade bodies are the main source of vWF, though, and α-granules probably play a minor role.
History
Weibel-Palade bodies were initially described by the
Swiss
anatomist
Ewald R. Weibel
and the
Romanian
physiologist
George Emil Palade
in
1964
. Prof. Palade was to win the
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
in
1974
for his work on the function of organelles in
cells
. Their observation was published in: Weibel ER, Palade GE.
New cytoplasmic components in arterial endothelia
. J Cell Biol 1964;23:101-112 (
fulltext
).
See also
Endothelium
Von Willebrand factor
Platelet
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