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Intracellulære

Intracellulære, commonly translated as intracellular in English, describes anything located inside a cell or occurring within cellular boundaries. This contrasts with extracellular space, intercellular spaces, and processes that involve movement between cells. Most of a cell’s metabolism occurs intracellularly.

The intracellular space comprises cytosol—the aqueous phase outside organelles—and a variety of membrane-bound and non-membrane-bound organelles.

Intracellular transport moves materials within the cell. The cytoskeleton (microtubules, actin filaments) serves as highways along

Protein synthesis and turnover are intracellular processes. Ribosomes translate mRNA into polypeptides, with rough endoplasmic reticulum

Maintaining intracellular homeostasis—pH, ion concentrations, energy balance, and organellar integrity—is essential for cell viability. Dysfunctions in

Major
components
include
the
nucleus
(genetic
material),
mitochondria
(energy
production),
chloroplasts
in
plants
(photosynthesis),
the
endoplasmic
reticulum
(protein
and
lipid
synthesis),
Golgi
apparatus
(protein
modification
and
trafficking),
lysosomes,
endosomes,
peroxisomes,
and
ribosomes
(protein
synthesis).
which
motor
proteins
such
as
kinesin,
dynein,
and
myosin
carry
vesicles
and
organelles.
Vesicular
trafficking
governs
secretion,
endocytosis,
and
lysosomal
delivery.
Calcium
ions
and
other
second
messengers
coordinate
intracellular
signaling.
producing
membrane-
or
secreted
proteins.
Post-translational
modification
and
sorting
occur
in
the
ER
and
Golgi.
Degradation
systems,
including
the
ubiquitin-proteasome
pathway
and
autophagy,
recycle
damaged
or
unnecessary
intracellular
components.
intracellular
pathways
underlie
many
diseases,
including
mitochondrial
disorders,
lysosomal
storage
diseases,
neurodegenerative
conditions,
and
certain
infections
where
pathogens
hijack
intracellular
routes.