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Acidophilic cells (Councilman bodies) are common.
Somatotrope cells are classified as acidophilic cells.
The acidophilic cells (GH and PRL) have extensive rough endoplasmic reticulum and produce single chain polypeptides without any glycosylation or phosphorylation.
A large amount of energy is available to the acidophile through proton movement across the membrane, but with it comes cytoplasmic acidity.
A. aceti is considered an acidophile which means it is able to survive in acidic environments.
The anthonymous term is "acidophile".
In fact in this situation, with pioneer microorganisms, the limiting factor is likely to be the environmental circumneutral pH, which inhibits many acidophile's growth.
A thermoacidophile (combination of thermophile and acidophile) is an extreme archeon which thrives in acidous, sulfur rich, high temperature environments.
Not all fruit trees are suitable for greywater irrigation, as reclaimed greywater is typically of high pH and acidophile plants don't do well in alkaline environments.
Some are lithotrophs that oxidize sulfur to sulfuric acid as an energy source, thus requiring the microorganism to be adapted to very low pH (i.e., it is an acidophile as well as thermophile).
An acidophile (or acidophil, or, as an adjectival form, acidophilic) describes is a term used by histologists to describe a particular staining pattern of cells and tissues when using haematoxylin and eosin stains.
Acidophiles display a great range of adaptations to not just tolerating, but thriving in an extreme pH environment (the definition of an acidophile being an organism that has a pH optimum below pH 3).