xanthophore - translation to arabic
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xanthophore - translation to arabic

ANIMAL CELLS THAT PRODUCE COLOR, OF WHICH MANY TYPES ARE PIGMENT-CONTAINING CELLS
Chromatophores; Erythrophores; Melanophore; Xanthophores; Xanthophore; Erythrophore; Iridophore; Chromomorphism; Chromomorphic; Melanophores; Cyanophore; Leucophore; Iridophores; Iridocyte; Irodophore; Metachrosis; Physiological color change; Physiological colour change; Pigment cell; Cromatophore
  • A [[veiled chameleon]], ''Chamaeleo calyptratus''. Structural green and blue colours are generated by overlaying chromatophore types to reflect filtered light.
  • An infant [[cuttlefish]], using background adaptation to mimic the local environment
  • Chromatophores in the skin of a [[squid]]
  • 7x speed timelapse video of fish melanophores responding to 200μM adrenaline
  • Leucophore layer composition
  • Fish and frog melanophores are cells that can change colour by dispersing or aggregating pigment-containing bodies.
  • trunk]] showing the dorsolateral (red) and ventromedial (blue) routes of chromatoblast migration
  • violet]] stripe with an unusual type of chromatophore.
  • At the bottom a [[mutant]] zebrafish larva that fails to synthesise melanin in its melanophores, at the top a non-mutant, wildtype larva
  • background adaptation]] on exposure to dark (top) and light environments (bottom).

xanthophore         
حامِلَةُ الأَصْفَر
xanthophore         
‎ حامِلَةُ الأَصْفَر‎
melanophore         
‎ حامِلَةُ الميلانين‎

Definition

Chromatophore
·noun One of the granules of protoplasm, which in mass give color to the part of the plant containing them.
II. Chromatophore ·noun A contractile cell or vesicle containing liquid pigment and capable of changing its form or size, thus causing changes of color in the translucent skin of such animals as possess them. They are highly developed and numerous in the cephalopods.

Wikipedia

Chromatophore

Chromatophores are cells that produce color, of which many types are pigment-containing cells, or groups of cells, found in a wide range of animals including amphibians, fish, reptiles, crustaceans and cephalopods. Mammals and birds, in contrast, have a class of cells called melanocytes for coloration.

Chromatophores are largely responsible for generating skin and eye colour in ectothermic animals and are generated in the neural crest during embryonic development. Mature chromatophores are grouped into subclasses based on their colour (more properly "hue") under white light: xanthophores (yellow), erythrophores (red), iridophores (reflective / iridescent), leucophores (white), melanophores (black/brown), and cyanophores (blue). While most chromatophores contain pigments that absorb specific wavelengths of light, the color of leucophores and iridophores is produced by their respective scattering and optical interference properties.

Some species can rapidly change colour through mechanisms that translocate pigment and reorient reflective plates within chromatophores. This process, often used as a type of camouflage, is called physiological colour change or metachrosis. Cephalopods, such as the octopus, have complex chromatophore organs controlled by muscles to achieve this; whereas vertebrates such as chameleons generate a similar effect by cell signalling. Such signals can be hormones or neurotransmitters and may be initiated by changes in mood, temperature, stress or visible changes in the local environment. Chromatophores are studied by scientists to understand human disease and as a tool in drug discovery.