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Cells: The Living Units

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Title: Cells: The Living Units


1
Chapter 3
  • Cells The Living Units

2
Structure of a Generalized Cell
3
Structure of a Generalized Cell
  • Plasma membrane
  • Nucleus
  • Cytoplasm
  • Intracellular fluid
  • organelles

4
Plasma Membrane
  • Separates intracellular fluids from extracellular
    fluids
  • Plays a dynamic role in cellular activity

5
Fluid Mosaic Model
  • Double layer of lipids with imbedded, dispersed
    proteins
  • Bilayer consists of phospholipids, cholesterol,
    glycolipids
  • Glycolipids are lipids with bound carbohydrate
  • Cholesterol stabilizes

6
Plasma Membrane
  • Phospholipid bilayer
  • 2 parallel sheets of phospholipid molecules
  • Tail to tail
  • Heads toward fluid

7
Membrane Proteins
  • Many span the membrane
  • Some attach loosely to the other proteins or
    lipids
  • Functions
  • Transport
  • Enzymatic activity
  • Receptors for signal transduction

8
Membrane Proteins
  • Functions
  • Intercellular adhesion
  • Cell-cell recognition
  • Attachment to cytoskeleton and extracellular
    matrix

9
Specializations of the Plasma Membrane
  • Microvilli
  • Increases the absorbing surface area
  • Membrane Junctions
  • Tight Junction
  • impermeable
  • encircles the cell

10
Specializations of the Plasma Membrane
  • Membrane Junctions
  • Desmosomes
  • Anchoring junctions scattered along sides of
    cells
  • Abundant in tissues subjected to high stress

11
Specializations of the Plasma Membrane
  • Membrane Junctions
  • Gap Junctions
  • a nexus that allows chemical substances to pass
    between cells

12
Membrane Transport
  • Passive processes substances cross membrane
    without any energy input from the cell
  • Active processes - the cell provides the
    metabolic energy (ATP) required to move
    substances across the membrane.

13
Passive Membrane Transport Diffusion
  • Tendency of molecules to scatter evenly
    throughout the environment
  • Molecules move from areas of high concentration
    to areas of low concentration
  • Molecules diffuse along, or down their
    concentration gradient
  • Speed of diffusion influenced by
  • Molecular size
  • Temperature

14
HI Low
15
Passive Membrane Transport Diffusion
  • Simple diffusion
  • Tiny nonpolar and lipid soluble substances
  • Diffuse directly through the lipid bilayer
  • Examples O2, CO2, fat-soluble vitamins, alcohol

16
Passive Membrane Transport Diffusion
  • Facilitated diffusion
  • Channels
  • Some are always open
  • Some are gaited
  • Selective due to pore size, charge in lining of
    channel
  • Limits diffusion by saturation

17
Passive Membrane Transport Diffusion
  • Facilitated diffusion
  • Carriers
  • Show specificity for certain polar molecules
    including sugars and amino acids
  • Limits diffusion by number of carriers present

18
Passive Membrane Transport Osmosis
  • Diffusion of solvent (water) across a
    semipermeable membrane
  • Occurs when the concentration of a solvent is
    different on opposite sides of a membrane
  • Osmolarity total concentration of solute
    particles in a solution

19
Effect of Membrane Permeability on Diffusion and
Osmosis
20
Effect of Membrane Permeability on Diffusion and
Osmosis
21
Effects of Solutions of Varying Tonicity
  • Tonicity how a solution affects cell volume
  • Isotonic solutions with the same solute
    concentration as that of the cytosol
  • Hypertonic solutions having greater solute
    concentration than that of the cytosol
  • Hypotonic solutions having lesser solute
    concentration than that of the cytosol

22
Passive Membrane Transport Filtration
  • The passage of water and solutes through a
    membrane by hydrostatic pressure
  • Pressure gradient pushes solute-containing fluid
    from a higher-pressure area to a lower-pressure
    area

23
Active Membrane Transport
  • Primary active transport
  • Uses ATP to move solutes across a membrane
  • Requires carrier proteins
  • Na-K pump

24
Sodium-Potassium Pump
25
Active Membrane Transport
  • Secondary active transport use of an exchange
    pump (such as the Na-K pump) indirectly to
    drive the transport of other solutes

26
Vesicular Transport
  • Transport of large particles and macromolecules
    across plasma membranes which requires ATP
  • Exocytosis moves substance from the cell
    interior to the extracellular space
  • Endocytosis enables large particles and
    macromolecules to enter the cell

27
Exocytosis
28
Clathrin-Mediated Endocytosis
29
Cytoplasm
  • Cytoplasm material between plasma membrane and
    the nucleus

30
Cytoplasm
  • 3 major elements
  • Cytosol largely water with dissolved protein,
    salts, sugars, and other solutes
  • Cytoplasmic organelles metabolic machinery of
    the cell
  • Inclusions chemical substances such as
    glycosomes, glycogen granules, and pigment

31
Cytoplasmic Organelles
  • Specialized cellular compartments
  • Membranous
  • Mitochondria, peroxisomes, lysosomes, endoplasmic
    reticulum, and Golgi apparatus
  • Nonmembranous
  • Cytoskeleton, centrioles, and ribosomes

32
Mitochondria
  • Double membrane structure with shelflike cristae
  • Provide most of the cells ATP via aerobic
    cellular respiration
  • Contain their own DNA and RNA

33
Ribosomes
  • Granules containing protein and rRNA
  • Site of protein synthesis
  • Free ribosomes synthesize soluble proteins
  • Membrane-bound ribosomes synthesize proteins to
    be incorporated into membranes or for export

34
Endoplasmic Reticulum
  • Interconnected tubes and parallel membranes
    enclosing cisternae
  • Continuous with the nuclear membrane
  • Two varieties rough ER and smooth ER

35
Rough ER
  • External surface studded with ribosomes
  • Manufactures all secreted proteins
  • Responsible for the synthesis of integral
    membrane proteins and phospholipids for cell
    membranes

36
Smooth ER
  • Tubules arranged in a looping network
  • Catalyzes the following reactions in various
    organs of the body
  • In the liver lipid and cholesterol metabolism,
    breakdown of glycogen and, along with the
    kidneys, detoxification of drugs
  • In the testes synthesis of steroid-based
    hormones
  • In the intestinal cells absorption, synthesis,
    and transport of fats
  • In skeletal and cardiac muscle storage and
    release of calcium

37
Golgi Apparatus
  • Stacked and flattened membranous sacs
  • Functions in modification, concentration, and
    packaging of proteins
  • Transport vessels from the ER fuse with the cis
    face of the Golgi apparatus
  • Proteins then pass through the Golgi apparatus to
    the trans face
  • Secretory vesicles leave the trans face of the
    Golgi stack and move to designated parts of the
    cell

38
Lysosomes
  • Spherical membranous bags containing digestive
    enzymes
  • Digest ingested bacteria, viruses, and toxins
  • Degrade nonfunctional organelles
  • Breakdown glycogen and release thyroid hormone
  • Breakdown nonuseful tissue
  • Breakdown bone to release Ca2
  • Secretory lysosomes are found in white blood
    cells, immune cells, and melanocytes

39
Endomembrane System
  • System of organelles that function to
  • Produce, store, and export biological molecules
  • Degrade potentially harmful substances
  • System includes
  • Nuclear envelope, smooth and rough ER, lysosomes,
    vacuoles, transport vesicles, Golgi apparatus,
    and the plasma membrane

40
Peroxisomes
  • Membranous sacs containing oxidases and catalases
  • Detoxify harmful or toxic substances
  • Neutralize dangerous free radicals
  • Free radicals highly reactive chemicals with
    unpaired electrons (i.e., O2)

41
Cytoskeleton
  • The skeleton of the cell
  • Dynamic, elaborate series of rods running through
    the cytosol
  • Consists of microtubules, microfilaments, and
    intermediate filaments

42
Microtubules
  • Dynamic, hollow tubes made of the spherical
    protein tubulin
  • Determine the overall shape of the cell and
    distribution of organelles

43
Microfilaments
  • Dynamic strands of the protein actin
  • Attached to the cytoplasmic side of the plasma
    membrane
  • Braces and strengthens the cell surface
  • Involved in in cell motility or change in shape

44
Intermediate Filaments
  • Tough, insoluble protein fibers with high tensile
    strength
  • Resist pulling forces on the cell and help form
    desmosomes

45
Centrioles
  • Small barrel-shaped organelles located in the
    centrosome near the nucleus
  • Pinwheel array of nine triplets of microtubules
  • Organize mitotic spindle during mitosis
  • Form the bases of cilia and flagella

46
Cilia
  • Whiplike, motile cellular extensions on exposed
    surfaces of certain cells
  • Move substances in one direction across cell
    surfaces

47
Nucleus
  • Contains nuclear envelope, nucleoli, chromatin,
    and distinct compartments rich in specific
    protein sets
  • Gene-containing control center of the cell
  • Contains the genetic library with blueprints for
    nearly all cellular proteins
  • Dictates the kinds and amounts of proteins to be
    synthesized

48
Nuclear Envelope
  • Selectively permeable double membrane barrier
    containing pores
  • Encloses jellylike nucleoplasm, which contains
    essential solutes
  • Outer membrane is continuous with the rough ER
    and is studded with ribosomes
  • Inner membrane is lined with the nuclear lamina,
    which maintains the shape of the nucleus
  • Pore complex regulates transport of large
    molecules into and out of the nucleus

49
Nucleoli
  • Dark-staining spherical bodies within the nucleus
  • Site of ribosome production

50
Chromatin
  • Threadlike strands of DNA and histones
  • Arranged in fundamental units called nucleosomes
  • Form condensed, barlike bodies of chromosomes
    when the nucleus starts to divide

51
Cell Life Cycle
  • Interphase
  • Growth (G1)
  • Synthesis (S)
  • Growth (G2)
  • Mitotic phase
  • Mitosis
  • Cytokinesis

52
Cell Life Cycle Interphase
  • G1 (gap 1) metabolic activity and vigorous
    growth
  • G0 cells that permanently cease dividing
  • S (synthetic) DNA replication
  • G2 (gap 2) preparation for division

53
Cell Life Cycle Interphase
  • Growth
  • Extended and condensed chromatin
  • Centrioles replicate

54
DNA Replication
  • DNA helices begin unwinding from the nucleosomes
  • Helicase untwists the double helix and exposes
    complementary strands
  • Each nucleotide strand serves as a template for
    building a new complementary strand

55
DNA Replication
  • RNA primers are formed by primase enzymes
  • DNA polymerase III continues from the primer and
    covalently adds complementary nucleotides to the
    template
  • http//www.ncc.gmu.edu/dna/repanim.htm

56
Cell Division
  • Essential for body growth and tissue repair
  • Mitosis nuclear division
  • Cytokinesis division of the cytoplasm

57
Mitosis
  • The phases of mitosis are
  • Prophase
  • Metaphase
  • Anaphase
  • Telophase

58
Cytokinesis
  • Cleavage furrow formed in late anaphase by
    contractile ring
  • Cytoplasm is pinched into two parts after mitosis
    ends

59
Mitosis Early Prophase
  • Asters are seen as chromatin condenses into
    chromosomes
  • Nucleoli disappear
  • Centriole pairs separate and the mitotic spindle
    is formed

60
Mitosis Late Prophase
  • Nuclear envelope fragments
  • Microtubules pull on chromosomes

61
Metaphase
  • Chromosomes cluster at the middle of the cell
    with their centromeres aligned at the exact
    center, or equator, of the cell
  • This arrangement of chromosomes along a plane
    midway between the poles is called the metaphase
    plate

62
Anaphase
  • Chromosomes split
  • Pulled toward poles
  • Cell elongates

63
TelophaseCytokinesis
  • New sets of chromosomes extend into chromatin
  • New nuclear membrane is formed from the rough ER
  • Nucleoli reappear
  • Generally cytokinesis completes cell division
  • http//www.bio.davidson.edu/misc/movies/mitosisnew
    t.mov

64
Protein Synthesis
  • Genes are segments of DNA carrying instructions
    for a polypeptide chain
  • Triplets of nucleotide bases form the genetic
    library
  • Each triplet specifies coding for an amino acid
  • DNA serves as master
  • blueprint for protein
  • synthesis

65
Roles of the Three Types of RNA
  • Messenger RNA (mRNA) carries the genetic
    information from DNA in the nucleus to the
    ribosomes in the cytoplasm
  • Transfer RNAs (tRNAs) bring the correct amino
    acid to the ribosome
  • Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) a structural component of
    ribosomes, decodes DNA

66
Transcription
  • Transfer of information from the strand of DNA to
    RNA
  • Occurs when the double strands of a DNA segment
    separate and complimentary RNA nucleotides pair
    with DNA nucleotides to form mRNA.
  • The information is in the form of codons

67
Translation
  • mRNA becomes associated with a ribosome
  • rRNA in the ribosome decodes mRNA

68

Translation
  • tRNA
  • tRNA bound to complimentary anticodon pairs with
    codon on mRMA
  • Enzyme in large ribosomal subunit bonds the AAs
    togehter
  • http//www.ncc.gmu.edu/dna/ANIMPROT.htm

69
Genetic Code
  • RNA codons code for amino acids according to a
    genetic code

70
Information Transfer from DNA to RNA
  • DNA triplets are transcribed into mRNA codons by
    RNA polymerase
  • Codons base pair with tRNA anticodons at the
    ribosomes
  • Amino acids are peptide bonded at the ribosomes
    to form polypeptide chains
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