circulating stock - meaning and definition. What is circulating stock
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What (who) is circulating stock - definition

TYPE OF EXTRACELLULAR VESICLE
Endothelial microparticle; Endothelial microparticles; Circulating microvesicle; User:Bwright33/Circulating Microvesicles; Circulating Microvesicles; Circulating microvesicles; Microvesicle
  • Transmission electron micrograph of lead citrate stained microvesicles. Black bar is 100 nanometers
  • The process of the formation of exosomes. 1. Cell undergoes endocytosis forming endocytic vesicles. 2. Endocytic vesicles fuse together forming an early endosome. 3. Endocytic cisterna matures into exocytic multivesicular body, during which membrane invaginations form exosomes. 4.Multivesicular body fuses with the plasma membrane, releasing exosomes into the extracellular space.

Circulating endothelial cell         
CELL TYPE
High Definition Circulating Endothelial Cell Assay; Circulating endothelial cells
Circulating endothelial cells (CECs) are endothelial cells that have been shed from the lining of the vascular wall into the blood stream.Woywodt, A.
stock         
  • Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company]]
  • A stockbroker using multiple screens to stay up to date on trading
COLLECTIVE FINANCIAL CAPITAL OF A SHARED CORPORATION
Equities; Equity security; Equity securities; Stocks and Shares; Stocks and shares; Stock (finance); Cash equity; Corporate stocks; Company stock
n.
inventory, supply
1) to take stock
2) in stock; out of stock (this item is not in stock)
share, shares in a corporation
3) to issue; sell stock
4) common stock (AE; BE has ordinary shares)
5) blue-chip; over-the-counter; preferred (AE; BE has preference shares) stock
equipment
6) rolling stock ('railway vehicles')
confidence, trust
7) to put stock in smb.
evaluation
8) to take stock (we must take stock of the situation)
stage productions
9) summer stock
livestock
10) to graze stock
lineage
11) of good stock
misc.
12) smb.'s stock in trade ('smb.'s customary practice')
Joint-stock company         
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  • The transfer letter from 1288 through which Bishop Peter of Västerås reacquires an eighth of Tiskasjöberg, Kopparberget. The original can be found at Riksarkivet (National Archive) in Stockholm.
  • access-date=1 November 2017 }}</ref>
BUSINESS ENTITY WHICH IS OWNED BY SHAREHOLDERS
Joint-Stock Company; Joint-stock companies; Joint-stock; Joint stock; Joint stock companies; Joint Stock Company; Stock corporation; Stock Corporation; Joint stock principle; Closed joint-stock company; Closed joint stock company; Closed Joint stock company; Jushik hoesa; Societa per Azioni; NJSC; National joint stock company; Joint Stock; Trading house; Closed Joint Stock Company; Public joint-stock company; Joint stock company; CJSC; Akciová společnost; Public Joint Stock Company; Akciova spolecnost; Limited liability joint-stock company; Public Joint-Stock Company; Public joint stock company; Joint stock corporation; Joint-stock corporation; Akciová spoločnosť; Private Joint Stock Company
A joint-stock company is a business entity in which shares of the company's stock can be bought and sold by shareholders. Each shareholder owns company stock in proportion, evidenced by their shares (certificates of ownership).

Wikipedia

Microvesicles

Microvesicles (ectosomes, or microparticles) are a type of extracellular vesicle (EV) that are released from the cell membrane. In multicellular organisms, microvesicles and other EVs are found both in tissues (in the interstitial space between cells) and in many types of body fluids. Delimited by a phospholipid bilayer, microvesicles can be as small as the smallest EVs (30 nm in diameter) or as large as 1000 nm. They are considered to be larger, on average, than intracellularly-generated EVs known as exosomes. Microvesicles play a role in intercellular communication and can transport molecules such as mRNA, miRNA, and proteins between cells.

Though initially dismissed as cellular debris, microvesicles may reflect the antigenic content of the cell of origin and have a role in cell signaling. Like other EVs, they have been implicated in numerous physiologic processes, including anti-tumor effects, tumor immune suppression, metastasis, tumor-stroma interactions, angiogenesis, and tissue regeneration. Microvesicles may also remove misfolded proteins, cytotoxic agents and metabolic waste from the cell. Changes in microvesicle levels may indicate diseases including cancer.