fibrille
Fibrille, in biology, is a slender, elongated structure formed by the assembly of proteins or other polymers into a fibrillar form. The term is the French equivalent of fibril and is used to describe a variety of fibrous elements that contribute to the structure and function of cells and tissues. Fibrils can vary widely in diameter, from a few nanometers to several hundred nanometers, and in length from hundreds of nanometers to micrometers.
Common examples include collagen fibrils in connective tissue, which assemble from collagen molecules into rope-like structures
In cells, fibrillar assemblies include cytoskeletal elements such as actin-based fibrils and intermediate filament networks that
Formation typically proceeds by nucleation of a seed followed by elongation as monomers or oligomers add on.
Study and imaging of fibrils employ electron microscopy, atomic force microscopy, X-ray diffraction, and specific staining