User Contributed Dictionary
Verb
burgeoning- present participle of burgeon
Noun
Adjective
burgeoning- that buds, grows or expands
Extensive Definition
Budding (also called burgeoning) is the formation
of a new organism by
the protrusion of part of another organism. This is very common in
plants and fungi, but may be found in animal
as well, such as the Hydra.
Usually, the protrusion stays attached to the primary organism for
a while, before becoming free. The new organism is naturally
genetically identical to the primary one (a clone). When
yeast buds, one cell becomes two cells. When a
sponge buds, a part of
the parent sponge falls off and starts to grow into a new sponge.
These are examples of asexual
reproduction.
In virology
Budding is the process by which enveloped
viruses acquire their
external envelope, often as fragment of the host cell
membrane, which bulges outwards and takes the virion inside. Because viruses
are not alive, the Gag protein is essential for this process. Some
viruses hijack the host cell proteins normally involved in endocytosis to facilitate
this process.
This method helps the virus leave the cell
without lysing the cell, thereby allowing the cellular machinery to
produce more viruses.
In embryology
The term budding is also applied to the process
of embryo differentiation
in which old structures are formed in outgrowth from preexisting
parts.
In horticulture
Budding is a process that consist of engrafting the bud of a plant into another plant, see Shield budding.External links
burgeoning in Bulgarian: Пъпкуване
burgeoning in Czech: Pučení
burgeoning in German: Knospung
burgeoning in Spanish: Gemación
burgeoning in French: Greffe en écusson
burgeoning in Latvian: Pumpurošanās
burgeoning in Dutch: Knopvorming
burgeoning in Japanese: 出芽
burgeoning in Polish: Pączkowanie
burgeoning in Portuguese: Gemulação
burgeoning in Russian: Почкование
burgeoning in Swedish:
Okulering