Title: Chapter 3: The Cellular Level of Organization BSC 2085C
1Chapter 3 The Cellular Level of OrganizationBSC
2085C
2Parts of a Cell
- Plasma Membrane
- Cytoplasm
- Cytosol
- Organelles
- Nucleus
- A cell is the basic, living, structural, and
functional unit of the body. - Cytology is the study of cell structure, and cell
physiology is the study of cell function.
3The Plasma MembraneThe Phospholipid Bilayer
with Bobbing ProteinsFluid Mosaic Model
- The Lipid Bilayer composed of phospholipids,
cholesterol, and glycolipids
4The Plasma Membrane
- The Lipid Bilayer
- Phospholipids
75
Amphipathic
5The Plasma Membrane
- The Lipid Bilayer
- Cholesterol classified as a lipid the most
abundant steroid in animal tissues used for the
synthesis of steroid hormones and bile salts
6The Plasma Membrane
- The Lipid Bilayer
- Glycolipids lipids with an attached carbohydrate
group
7The Plasma MembraneBobbing Proteins Fluid
Mosaid Model
- Arrangement of Membrane Proteins
- Integral Proteins extend into or across the
entire (transmembrane) lipid bilayer - They are amphipathic.
- Many are glycoproteins.
- The combined glycoproteins and glycolipids form
the glycocalyx which helps cells recognize one
another, adhere to one another, and be protected
from digestion by enzymes in the extracellular
fluid. - Peripheral Proteins located on the inner or
outer surface of the lipid bilayercan be
stripped away without disturbing the integrity of
the plasma membrane
8Arrangement of Membrane Proteins
9The Plasma Membrane
- Functions of Membrane Proteins
- Membrane proteins vary in different cells and
function as channels (pores), transporters,
receptors, enzymes, cell-identity markers, and
linkers (Figure 3.3). - The different proteins help to determine many of
the functions of the plasma membrane.
10The Plasma Membrane
- Functions of Membrane Proteins
- Formation of channel
- Passageway to allow specific substance to pass
through - Transporter proteins
- Bind a specific substance, change their shape,
and move it across the membrane - Receptor proteins
- Cellular recognition site bind to substance
11The Plasma Membrane
- Functions of Membrane Proteins
- Cell identity marker
- Allow cell to recognize other similar cells
- Linker
- Anchor proteins in cell membrane or to other
cells - Allow cell movement
- Cell shape structure by anchoring filaments
- Act as Enzyme
- Speed up reactions (e.g., lactase splits lactose
into glucose and sucrose)
12The Plasma Membrane
- Membrane Fluidity
- Membranes are fluid structuresmost of the
membrane lipids and many of the membrane proteins
easily move in the bilayer. - Membrane lipids and proteins are mobile in their
own half of the bilayer. - Cholesterol serves to stabilize the membrane and
reduce membrane fluidity.
13The Plasma Membrane
- The plasma membrane is selectively permeable
some things can pass through and others cannot. - The lipid bilayer portion of the membrane is
permeable to small, nonpolar, uncharged molecules
(e.g., O2, CO2) but impermeable to ions and
charged or polar molecules. - The membrane is also permeable to water.
- Transmembrane proteins that act as channels or
transporters increase the permeability of the
membrane to molecules that cannot cross the lipid
bilayer. - Macromolecules are unable to pass through the
plasma membrane except via a vesicle (a type of
cell organelle).
14The Plasma Membrane
- Gradients Across the Plasma Membrane
- A concentration gradient is the difference in the
concentration of a chemical between one side of
the plasma membrane and the other. - Oxygen and sodium ions are more concentrated
outside the cell membrane with carbon dioxide and
potassium ions more concentrated inside the cell
membrane (Figure 3.4a).
15 Gradients Across Membrane
- Concentration gradient
- Electrical gradient
16The Plasma Membrane
- Gradients Across the Plasma Membrane
- The inner surface of the membrane is more
negatively charged and the outer surface is more
positively charged. This sets up an electrical
gradient, also called the membrane potential. - Maintaining the concentration and electrical
gradients are important to the life of the cell. - The combined concentration and electrical
gradients are called the electrochemical
gradient.
17Transport Across the Plasma Membrane
- Principles of Diffusion
- A net movement down a concentration gradient
- Movement from an area of high concentration to an
area of low concentration - Depends on molecule mass, size, temperature,
distance, and concentration gradient
18Transport Across the Plasma Membrane
- Osmosis
- Movement of water across a semipermeable membrane
from an area of low solute concentration to an
area of high solute concentration - Water molecules penetrate the membrane by
diffusion through the lipid bilayer or through
aquaporins, transmembrane proteins that function
as water channels.
19Transport Across the Plasma Membrane
- Osmotic pressure of a solution is proportional to
the concentration of the solute particles that
cannot cross the membrane (Figure 3.7c).
20Transport Across the Plasma Membrane
- Osmosis
- Tonicity The ability to change the volume of
cells inside a solution by moving water into our
out of the cell
21Transport Across the Plasma Membrane
- Diffusion Through the Lipid Bilayer
- Nonpolar, hydrophobic molecules such as
respiratory gases, some lipids, small alcohols,
and ammonia can diffuse across the lipid bilayer. - It is important for gas exchange, absorption of
some nutrients, and excretion of some wastes.
22Transport Across the Plasma Membrane
- Diffusion Through Membrane Channels
- Most membrane channels are ion channels, allowing
passage of small, inorganic ions which are
hydrophilic. - Ion channels are selective and specific and may
be gated or open all the time (Figure 3.5).
23Transport Across the Plasma Membrane
- Facilitated Diffusion/Transport
- Substance binds to carrier protein embedded in
plasma membrane - Carrier protein changes shape and releases the
substance on the other side - Requires no ATP
- Transport occurs down a concentration gradient
- Ex. glucose, amino acids
24Facilitated Diffusion of Glucose
- Glucose binds to transportprotein
- Transport protein changes shape
- Glucose moves across cell membrane (but only
downthe concentration gradient) - Kinase enzyme reduces glucose concentration
inside the cell by transforming glucose into
glucose-6-phosphate - Transporter proteins always bring glucose into
cell
25Transport Across the Plasma Membrane
- Active Transport
- Active transport is an energy-requiring process
that moves solutes such as ions, amino acids, and
monosaccharides against a concentration gradient.
- In primary active transport, energy derived from
ATP changes the shape of a transporter protein,
which pumps a substance across a plasma membrane
against its concentration gradient.
26Transport Across the Plasma Membrane
- Active Transport Primary Active Transport
- The most prevalent primary active transport
mechanism is the sodium ion/potassium ion pump
(Figure 3.8). - requires 40 of cellular ATP
- all cells have 1000s of them
- maintains low concentration of Naand a high
concentration of K in the cytosol - operates continually
27Transport Across the Plasma Membrane
- Active Transport Secondary Active Transport
- In secondary active transport, the energy stored
in the form of a sodium or hydrogen ion
concentration gradient is used to drive other
substances against their own concentration
gradients. - Plasma membranes contain several antiporters and
symporters powered by the sodium ion gradient
(Figure 3.9).
28Digitalis
- Digitalis slows the sodium ion-calcium ion
antiporters, allowing more calcium to stay inside
heart muscle cells, which increases the force of
their contraction and thus strengthens the
heartbeat.
29Transport Across the Plasma Membrane
- Transport in Vesicles
- A vesicle is a small membranous sac formed by
budding off from an existing membrane. - endocytosis
- exocytosis
30Transport Across the Plasma Membrane
- Transport in Vesicles
- Endocytosis bringing something into the cell
- Phagocytosis cell eating by macrophages
(derived from a monocytes WBC) and other WBCs - Particle binds to receptor protein
- Whole bacteria and viruses are engulfed and later
digested - Pinocytosis nonselective cell drinking (no
receptor proteins) - Exocytosis releasing something from cell
- Vesicles form inside cell, fuse to cell membrane
- Release their contents digestive enzymes,
hormones, neurotransmitters, or waste products - Replace cell membrane lost by endocytosis
31Review
- Table 3.1 summarizes the processes by which
materials are transported into and out of cells.
32Cytoplasm
- Cytosol
- Intracellular fluid mostly water, inorganic
ions, proteins, carbohydrates, lipids, ATP, and
wastes - Functionally, cytosol is the medium in which many
metabolic reactions occur.
33Cytoplasm
- Organelles (small organs)
- Organelles are specialized structures that have
characteristic shapes and perform specific
functions in cellular growth, maintenance, and
reproduction.
34Cytoplasm
- Organelles
- Cytoskeleton
- The cytoskeleton is a network of several kinds of
protein filaments that extend throughout the
cytoplasm and provides a structural framework for
the cell. - It consists of microfilaments, intermediate
filaments, and microtubules.
35Cytoplasm
- Organelles
- Cytoskeleton
- Microfilaments Most microfilaments are composed
of actin and function in movement and mechanical
support (Figure 3.13a).
36Cytoplasm
- Organelles
- Cytoskeleton
- Intermediate filaments are composed of several
different proteins and function in support and to
help anchor organelles such as the nucleus
(Figure 3.13b).
37Cytoplasm
- Organelles
- Cytoskeleton
- Microtubules are composed of a protein called
tubulin and help determine cell shape and
function in the intracellular transport of
organelles and the migration of chromosome during
cell division. (Figure 3.13c)