Title: The Cell
1The Cell
- Cell Theory/HistoryStructuresTransport
Differentiation Levels of Organization
2Robert Hooke
- English physicist
- 1665
- Saw a slice of cork tree tissue
- Tiny chambers
- Termed them cells
- (looked like monks cells in monastery)
3Robert Hooke
- Published his book Micrographia
- Contained drawings of cork cells
- Used early microscope
4Anton Van Leeuwenhoek
- Dutch businessman
- 1674
- Perfected microscope
- (about 300x)
- Saw living things in pond water
- Animalcules
- Observed bacteria (on wood teeth) and protozoa
5Matthias Schleiden
- German botanist
- 1838
- Concludes that all plants are made up of cells
6Theodor Schwann
- German zoologist
- 1839
- Concluded that all animals are made up of cells
7Rudolph Virchow
- German physician/pathologist
- 1855
- Worked with eggs from various organisms
- Proposes that all cells come from existing cells
8Cell Theory
- All living things are composed of cells.
- Cells are the basic units of structure and
function in living things. - New cells are produced from existing cells.
9Janet Plowe
- 1931
- Demonstrates that the cell membrane is a physical
structure, not an interface between two liquids.
10Lynn Margulis
- 1970
- Proposes a theory that certain organelles were
once free-living cells themselves
11Singer - Nicholson
- 1972
- Fluid Mosaic Model
- Membranes are phospholipid bilayers with globular
proteins embedded in them - Membrane is always moving
- Made up of smaller pieces (mosaic)
12Prokaryote cells
13Eukarote cells
14Cell Structures
15Barriers
- Cell Wall
- Plants prok. (not animals)
- Structural (plant support) protective role
- Cellulose
- Freely permeable
16Cell walls of onion skin
17Barriers
- Cell Membrane (plasma membrane)
- In ALL cells
- Support/protection
- Regulates movement in/out of
- Water
- Nutrients
- Waste products
18Cell Membrane...
19Barriers
- Nuclear Envelope (nuclear membrane)
- Surrounds nucleus
- Thousands of pores
- Material move in/out, incl. RNA
20Nuclear envelope
21Fluids
- Cytoplasm (cytosol)
- Bet. cell mem. and nuclear env., site of most
chemical activity - Nucleoplasm
- Semi-fluid medium of nucleus
- Protoplasm
- Term used for all substances inside cell
22The Control Center
23The Nucleus
- Controls most cell processes
- Contains Chromatin
- DNA bound to proteins
- During cell division, condenses to Chromosomes
- Has a Nucleolus
- Small, dense region
- Assembly of Ribosomes
- Nuclear Envelope (or membrane)
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25Little Organsassist the cell in conducting
reproductive, respiratory, and structural needs
- Organelles of the cytoplasm
26Cytoskeleton
- Protein filaments
- Maintains cell shape
- Involved in cell movement
27Cytoskeleton
28Ribosomes
- Small,made of RNA
- Assembly of proteins
- Free in cytoplasm or att. to ER
29Endoplasmic Reticulum
- Called ER
- Two types
- Rough ER
- Ribosomes stud surface
- Aids in synthesis and modif. of proteins
- Found wrapped around nucleus
- Smooth ER
- No ribosomes
- Special tasks with certain enzymes
- (such as making lipids)
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31Mitochondrion
- Uses energy from food
- Makes high-energy compounds (ATP) needed for Rx
elsewhere. - The POWERHOUSE of the cell
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33Golgi Apparatus
- Receives proteins from rough ER
- Enzymes attach carbs and lipids to the proteins
- Can store proteins until needed
- Proteins then sent to final destination
- PACKAGING and SHIPPING
34Golgi Apparatus
35Vacuoles
- Saclike structure
- Stores water, salts, proteins, carbs
- Can be large in plant cells
- Helps in plant support by keeping turgor pressure
high
36Vacuoles
37Vacuoles
Korotnovella, an amoeba. Inside this cell we can
see a nucleus near the center with a rather
angular dark nucleolus, various food vacuoles,
and a clear round contractile vacuole at about 10
o'clock.
38Lysosomes
- Filled with enzymes
- Breaks down
- lipids, carbs, and proteins from food
- old organelles
- debris and harmful invaders
39Video
40Plastid 1 Chloroplasts
- In plants, not animals or fungi
- Uses sunlight to make energy rich food mol. thru
photosynthesis
41Chloroplasts
42Chloroplast
43Plastid 2 Leucoplast
- Sometimes called amyloplast stores starch
(amylose starch)
44Plastid 3 Chromoplast
- Stores pigments in plants
45Centrioles
- Cylindrical group of microtubules
- In animal cells, used in cell division
- As basal bodies, form cilia and flagella
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47The Cell Membrane
- Is composed of a phospholipid bilayer
-
-
- A barrier reg. what passes in/out
- Supports and protects
- Selectively permeable only certain things pass
through. - About 5 nanometers thick (1 nm 1 Billionth of a
meter)
48Cell membrane - Structure
- A phospholipid contains-
- one head negatively charged phosphate group that
is hydrophilic (water-loving) - two tails of fatty acid chains that are
hydrophobic (water fearing)
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51Cell membrane features
- The fluid mosaic model
- it is fluid in nature allowing cell mobility
- Scattered in the membrane are various proteins
which perform various functions - enzyme activity,
- cell attachment,
- communicating with other cells,
- Trans. of substances in and out
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53Passive transport
- Diffusion net movement of sub. (liquid or gas)
from an area of higher conc. to area of lower
conc. Example perfume
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55Passive transport
- Osmosis diffusion of water across a
semi-permeable or selectively perm. membrane. - Hypertonic Solution having a high conc. of
solute. - Hypotonic Solution having a low conc. of
solute. - Isotonic Both solutions have equal solute conc.
- This difference (?) of conc. of molecules across
a space is called a Concentration Gradient
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58Animal Plant
Lysis Equilibrium Plasmolysis
Turgid Flaccid Plasmolysis
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60Passive transport
- Facilitated diffusion trans. of materials
across membranes by transport proteins
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63Active transport
- Active transport - Trans. of molecules against a
concentration gradient (from regions of low conc.
to regions of high conc.) with the aid of
proteins in the cell mem. and energy from ATP
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65Other types of active transport Endocytosis
import of materials into cell by infoldings of
the cell membrane. A. phagocytosis cell
eating extensions of the cell membrane
surround the food and make a vacuole.
Lysosomes then secrete enzymes into
vacuole to digest food. B. pinocytosis cell
drinking smaller infoldings allowing droplets
of liquid to enter cell.
66Endocytosis in general
67- Exocytosis reverse of endocytosis
- Dumping of excretions or wastes outside by
discharging them from waste vacuoles. - Also can result in secretion of substances (ex
gland cells secreting hormones into the
bloodstream)
68Cell Differentiation
- And hierarchy of organisms tissues
69Cell differentiation
- The process by which unspecialized cells develop
into their mature forms and functions - Embryonic Stem Cells
- Undifferentiated (unspecialized)
- Totipotent can develop into ANY type tissue
- Adult Stem Cells
- Pluripotent or multipotent can develop into
certain types of tissues.
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75Levels of organization
- Level one cells -basic unit of life examples
are - blood cells
- Red (RBC, or erythrocytes)
- White (leukocytes)
- nerve cells (neurons),
- bone cells (osteoblasts)
76Levels of organization
- Level two -tissues Made up of cells that are
similar in structure and function and which work
together to perform a specific activity - -Humans have 4 basic tissues connective,
epithelial, muscle, and nerve. - Connective tissue
- include bones, ligaments, cartilage, blood,
tendons - Epithelial tissue-
- skin, the mucosa, and the serosa (lines body
cavities and internal organs) - Muscle tissue-
- skeletal muscle, smooth muscle, and cardiac
muscle - Nerve tissue-
- brain, spinal cord, and nerves
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80Levels of organization
- LEVEL 3 Organs -Made up of tissues that work
together to perform a specific activity - heart, brain, skin, etc.
- LEVEL4 - Organ Systems -Groups of two or more
organs that work together to perform a specific
function for the organism. - The Human body has 11 organ systems -
circulatory, digestive, endocrine (hormonal),
excretory (urinary), lymphatic (immune),
integumentary (skin), muscular, nervous,
reproductive, respiratory, and skeletal.
81Levels of organization
- LEVEL 5 - Organisms -Entire living things that
can carry out all basic life processes. - Meaning they can take in materials, release
energy from food, release wastes, grow, respond
to the environment, and reproduce. - Usually made up of organ systems, but an organism
may be made up of only one cell such as bacteria
or protist. - Examples - bacteria, amoeba, mushroom, sunflower,
human
82Cell Regulation
- What makes a cell divide?
- Internal signal Enzymes produced by cell
- Ext. signal like growth factor produced
elsewhere - When cells packed close, NO division
- Not packed, division starts
- Checkpoints where stop/go signals reg. division
83Uncontrolled division
- Too many cells form a tumor
- Disrupts normal cell activity
- Takes nutrients
- If one area only benign
- If spreading malignant
84The staging of a carcinoma has to do with the
size of the tumor, and the degree to which it has
penetrated. When the tumor is small and has not
penetrated the mucosal layer, it is said to be
stage I cancer. Stage II tumors are into the
muscle wall, and stage III involves nearby lymph
nodes. The rare stage IV cancer has spread
(metastasized) to remote organs.
http//www.nytimes.com/imagepages/2007/08/01/healt
h/adam/19222Stagesofcancer.html
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