melanosome
noun
me·la·no·some
mə-ˈla-nə-ˌsōm
ˈme-lə-nə-
plural melanosomes
: one of the membrane-bound spherical to elliptical granules within a melanocyte (as in skin, eyes, or hair follicles) that functions in the synthesis, storage, and transport of melanin and that transfer melanin from melanocytes to keratinocytes in skin and hair shafts
The melanin emerges from the cells in tiny cucumberlike particles called melanosomes that rise through a branching network of tubelike connections, eventually to board the keratinocytes rising from the basal-cell layer to the outer keratin layer.—James C. G. Conniff
also
: a similar melanin-producing granule in a melanophore
In contrast to mammalian melanosomes, the melanosomes in fish and amphibian melanophores, which are equivalent to the melanocytes in mammals, are rapidly transported bidirectionally in response to extracellular stimuli and are not transferred to neighboring cells. —M. Fukada
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