Title: Cells: The Living Units
1Chapter 3
- Cells The Living Units
- J.F. Thompson, Ph.D. J.R. Schiller, Ph.D. G.
Pitts, Ph.D.
2The Cell Theory
- The Cell is the fundamental structural and
functional unit of living organisms - The activity of an organism is dependent on both
the individual and collective activities of its
cells - Cell actions are determined and made possible by
specific subcellular structures The Principle
of Complementarity - Cells come from cells
3The Cellular Basis of Life
- Overview
- The cell is the unit of life it contains
everything needed to survive. - Loss of cellular homeostasis ? disease
- Made of complex organic molecules (containing
mostly carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen and
traces of others elements) - Organized into multiple structures called
organelles - Many different shapes and sizes
20 µm - 1 m
5-24 µm
4Not All Cells Contain Every Component
- 3 basic parts
- Nucleus
- Cytoplasm
- all cellular contents between plasma membrane and
nucleus - organelles are specialized internal structures
- Plasma membrane
5Plasma Membrane Structure Fluid Mosaic Model
- Fluid membrane components can move within the
membrane - Mosaic a mix of molecular components
- Lipids phospholipid bilayer foundation with some
cholesterol mixed in - Proteins diverse, can be varied and regulated to
alter membrane functions - Carbohydrates combined with lipids/proteins make
up the glycocalyx - sticky surface that functions in cell
recognition - Individual molecules are recycled often
6Plasma Membrane Structure
- Membrane Chemistry and Anatomy
- 50-50 ratio by weight lipid/protein
- Far more lipid molecules than protein molecules
because of protein molecules larger sizes
7Plasma Membrane Chemistry
- 50-50 ratio by weight lipid/protein
- Far more lipid molecules than protein molecules
because of protein molecules larger sizes
8Plasma Membrane lipids
- Phospholipids 75
- Bilayer
- Phosphate heads are polar, thus hydrophilic,
point out towards interstitial fluid and in
toward cytoplasm - Non polar fatty acid tails are hydrophobic, make
up middle of membrane - Glycolipids 5
- Contribute to glycocalyx
- Cholesterol 20
- Increases mobility (fluidity) of phospholipids
9Plasma Membrane Proteins
- Determine the functions a cell can perform
- Composition varies widely among cell types
- Integral proteins located within
- the membrane
- channels
- transporters
- receptors
- intracellular junctions
- enzymes
- cytoskeleton anchors
- cell identity markers (glycoproteins)
- peripheral proteins located on either
- face of the membrane
- A similar list of many functions
10Membrane Junctions
Tight Junctions Impermeable junctions that
encircle adjacent cells. Desmosones Anchoring
junctions between cells. Gap Junctions
Communicating junctions that allow substance to
pass from one cell to another.
11Membrane Transport
- Selective permeability - allows passage of some
substances limits others - Dependent on
- molecular size
- lipid solubility
- charge
- membranes impermeable to all charged molecules
- Ions only move through a membrane through
channels - the presence of channels transporters is very
specific
12Passive Transport
- Moves materials across cell and organelle
membranes without expending cellular energy - Simple Diffusion
- kinetic energy is everywhere - allows mixing or
diffusion - diffusion requires a concentration gradient
- high concentration in one area, lower
concentration in another - if areas are continuous (connected), particles
move with (down) the concentration gradient - eventually it reaches equal concentration
everywhere - equilibrium
13Factors Affecting Diffusion
- Increased temperature increases diffusion rate
- Greater concentration gradients increase
diffusion rate - Larger surface area increases diffusion rate
- Smaller particle sizes increase diffusion rate
- Time - diffusion decreases as concentrations
equalize
14Simple Diffusion
- water and lipid-soluble molecules move freely
through the membrane
(a)
15Facilitated Diffusion
- Integral proteins allow larger molecules or
charged/polar ions to diffuse across membrane - Passive transport because substances diffuse
down the concentration gradient - no cellular
energy required - May be regulated by hormones
- example insulin will increase cellular
glucose uptake
Channel
Carrier
16Osmosis
- The diffusion of water from an area of higher
H2O to lower H2O - Water concentration 1/solute concentration
- Polar water molecules move through aquaporin
channels (AQP) - Or (perhaps) wiggle through phospholipids
17Osmolarity and Osmotic Pressure
- Osmolarity the total concentration of all
solutes - Osmotic pressure (s) the net pressure effect of
individual particles in solution - Hydrostatic pressure (h) fluid pressure is
created by osmosis
h
s
18Tonicity
- The ability of a solution to change the shape
(tone) of cells by altering their internal
water volume - Isotonic solutions
- Solute concentration is the same inside and
outside the cells - No net diffusion of water (e.g., normal saline
solution is isotonic to blood plasma)
19Tonicity
- Hypertonic solution
- a solution with higher solute than inside cells
- water moves out of cells cells shrink
(crenation) - Hypotonic solution
- a solution with lower solute than inside cells
- water moves into cells, cells swell may rupture
20Active Transport Processes
- Energy must be expended for active processes
(they require the energy derived from splitting
ATP energy of hydrolysis) - Some substances cannot move passively because
they - are too big
- have the wrong charge
- must be moved against concentration gradient
- Two mechanisms
- active transport
- vesicular transport
211. Active Transport
- Integral membrane proteins (pumps or
transporters) use ATP hydrolysis energy to move
substances against their concentration gradient - Two types of Active Transport
- Primary active transport pump uses ATP energy to
transport substances directly. - Secondary active transport energy from ATP
creates concentration gradient that is used to
drag or push transport of another
substance(s) by facilitated transport
22a. Primary Active Transport
- Primary active transport pump uses ATP energy to
transport substances directly. - Na and Cl- almost always moved by primary active
transport - Many other substances, K, CA2, H, glucose,
amino acids, etc. may be transported by primary
active transport - Na/ K ATPase
- pumps 3 Na out 2 K in during each cycle
- because Na K ions always leaks across the
membrane, the pump must always operate
See also Fig. 3.10, p. 76
23b. Secondary Active Transport
- energy from ATP drives ion pump to create
concentration gradient then carrier protein uses
energy of concentration gradient to drag or
push transport of another substance(s) by
facilitated transport - Symport/symporter transports two substances in
the same direction (co-transport) - Antiport/antiporter transports two substances
in opposite directions (counter-transport)
24Vesicular Transport
- The transfer of large molecules and fluids across
membranes via vesicles. This type of transport
mechanism includes exocytosis and endocytosis.
Exocytosis
25Endocytosis
Phagocytosis
Clathrin-mediated endocytosis
Receptor-mediated endocytosis
26Resting Membrane Potential
- Generating/maintaining a resting membrane
potential - all cells are polarized
- negatively charged inside
- positively charged outside
- Na/K ATPase creates the unequal charge
distribution - The sodium-potassium pump transports 3 Na out
2 K in with each cycle, using the energy of one
ATP hydrolysis - More K tends to diffuse out through leak
channels than Na - More negatively charged proteins (A-) are located
within the cell - This creates the charge differential
- Electrochemical gradient
- the net effect of all charged ions on either side
of the membrane
27Cell-Environment Interactions
- Cells interact with their environment, including
other cells, via various molecules in their cell
membrane - Cell adhesion molecules Attach cells to their
environment - Membrane receptors Detect contact and chemical
signals - Contact inhibition regulates cell proliferation
- Hormones, neurotransmitters, and other ligands
- Voltage-sensitive membrane channel proteins
Detect voltage changes - Essential for nerve and muscle function
28Cell-Environment Interactions Membrane Receptors
- contact signaling - identifying neighbor cells
- contact inhibition - regulates cell proliferation
- electrical signaling - channels responding to
voltage changes (changes in the concentrations of
charged ions) - chemical signaling various signal compounds
neurotransmitters, hormones, local hormones, and
other ligands
29Chemical Signaling G-Protein Linked Receptors
- A chemical signaling mechanism
- Ligand binds to receptor
- Receptor activates G protein that activates an
enzyme - The enzyme activates a second messenger
- Second messenger activates other enzymes
30The Cytoplasm
- Cytosol viscous, semitransparent fluid in which
other cytoplamic elements are suspended - Cytoplasmic organelles you should know
- Mitochondria
- Ribosomes
- Rough endoplasmic reticulum (Rough ER)
- Smooth endoplasmic reticulum (Smooth ER)
- Golgi apparatus
- Lysosomes Peroxisomes
- Cytoskeleton
- Nucleus
- Nucleoli
- Inclusion bodies substances
- not enclosed in membrane
- Centrioles
- Cilia
- Flagella
31The Cytoplasm
- Cytosol viscous, semitransparent fluid in which
other cytoplamic elements are suspended - Cytoplasmic organelles you should know
- Mitochondria
- Ribosomes
- Rough endoplasmic reticulum (Rough ER)
- Smooth endoplasmic reticulum (Smooth ER)
- Golgi apparatus
- Lysosomes Peroxisomes
- Cytoskeleton
- Nucleus
- Nucleoli
- Inclusion bodies substances
- not enclosed in membrane
- Centrioles
- Cilia
- Flagella
not membrane-bound
32Mitochondria
- The powerhouse of the cell
- Generates most ATP
- Have 2 membranes
- Contain mitochondrial DNA (passed from mother
only) - Arose from bacterial infection
33Endoplasmic Reticulum
- Interconnected tubes parallel membranes
enclosing cisternae - Rough ER
- Studded with ribosomes
- Manufactures secreted proteins
- Manufactures integral proteins and phospholipids
34Rough Endoplasmic Reticulum
35Smooth Endoplasmic Reticulum
- Does not contain ribosomes
- Not involved in protein synthesis
- Catalyzes chemical reactions
- Lipid metabolism
- Steroid synthesis
- Absorption, synthesis, and transport of fats
- Drug detoxification
- Breakdown of glycogen
- Ca2 ion storage
36Golgi Apparatus
- The protein traffic director.
- Modifies and packages proteins and lipids made in
the RER. - Produces lysosomes and secretory
vesicles/granules.
37Endomembrane Transport
38Lysosomes
- Disintegrator bodies
- Spherical organelles containing digestive enzymes
under acidic conditions - Digest
- Bacteria, viruses, toxins
- Non-functional organelles
- Non-useful tissues
- bone
39Peroxisomes
- Peroxide bodies
- Detoxify alcohols and formaldehyde
- Neutralize free radicals (chemicals with unpaired
electrons)
40Cytoskeleton I
- Microtubules
- Large diameter, hollow tubes made of tubulins
- Extend outward from the centrosome
- Anchor and transport organelles
- Very dynamic
41Cytoskeleton II
- Intermediate filaments
- Medium sized filament
- Act as guy wires
42Cytoskeleton III
- Microfilaments
- The smallest filament
- Composed of actin
- Involved in cell motility and cell shape
- Responsible for muscle contraction when actin
interacts with myosin
43Centrosome Centromere
- Centrosome
- Microtubule organizing center
- Contains centrioles
- Centrioles
- Involved in mitosis
- Give rise to cilia and flagella
44The Nucleus
- Cells control center
- Usually visible
- Nuclear envelope
- double membrane
- nuclear pores in membrane allow passage of
substances between cytoplasm and nucleus - Contains the hereditary material (DNA)
- DNA carries instructions for making proteins
- determines cell structure, coordinates activities
of the cell
45The Nucleolus
- Nucleoli
- Darker staining, oval/spherical bodies within the
nucleus - Clusters of DNA, RNA, and protein (not
membrane-bound) - The site of ribosome assembly
46Chromatin
- Grainy threadlike material seen in the nucleus
- DNA molecules organize into large, compact
visible chromosomes before each cell division - Chromosomes contain DNA coiling proteins
- DNA is first wrapped around histone proteins -
"beads on a string - Higher levels of DNA packaging (supercoiling)
47Chromatin Organization
- DNA is packaged by various levels of supercoiling
48Chromatin Organization
49The Cell Cycle
- Interphase
- normal cell growth
- three subphases
- G1
- growth and metabolism
- protein replication
- S (synthesis of DNA)
- preparation for division
- DNA replication
- G2
- more metabolism
- further preparation
- enzymes, proteins for mitosis
- Mitosis nuclear division
50Mitosis - Nuclear Division
P
- Prophase
- Metaphase
- Anaphase
- Telophase
M
A
T
51DNA Replication I
Unwinding of DNA by helicase
Replication fork
Replication bubble
52DNA Replication II
53DNA Replication Summary
- semi-conservative
- helicase unwinds DNA
- DNA polymerase
- one strand is the template
- builds a complementary strand
- bases pair with hydrogen bonds
- A-T
- C-G
54Protein Synthesis
- Transcription (in nucleus)
- DNA gene blue print
- template
- triplet code - 3 bases/AA
- exons - expressed
- introns excised
- RNA tools for protein synthesis
- mRNA
- tRNA
- rRNA
- Translation (in cytoplasm)
- Ribosome
- codons are read to build a primary protein
structure
55Transcription I
56Transcription II
57Translation I
58Translation at the Ribosome
59Gene Expression Review
- DNA contains a sequence of nitrogenous bases
which codes for the sequence of amino acids in a
protein - A triplet code, in which each codon is composed
of 3 bases, forms the genetic code - During transcription
- one strand of DNA serves as a template for
formation of messenger RNA - mRNA has bases complementary to the base series
in the DNA - Messenger RNA is processed, with intron removal,
before leaving the nucleus
60Gene Expression Review (cont.)
- mRNA carries the codon sequence to the ribosomes
(rRNA and protein) in the cytoplasm - Each tRNA carries a particular kind of amino acid
- each tRNA also carries a 3-base anticodon which
pairs complementarily to a codon of the mRNA - During translation
- the linear sequence of codons in the mRNA
determines the order of tRNAs and their attached
amino acids - sequential peptide bond formation produces the
primary structure of the protein at the ribosome
61End Chapter 3