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Overview of Cellular Organization and Functions

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Title: Overview of Cellular Organization and Functions


1
Overview of Cellular Organization and Functions
  • Cathleen Pettepher
  • Cancer Biology
  • 776 PRB
  • 3-3427
  • cathy.pettepher_at_vanderbilt.edu

2
Objectives
  • Get general idea of cell organization
  • Describe the major cellular components
  • Understand what changes in organelles tell you
    about dynamics of cells.
  • Develop global perspective on cell organelles
  • Structure molecular organization and appearance
  • How structure relates to function

3
Biological Organization
Atoms Molecules Cells
Tissues
Organs
Cell Biology
4
The Cell
  • Human body comprises more than 200 different
    types of cells, each of which
  • is surrounded by a bi-lipid plasma membrane
  • possesses organelles structural subunits that
    permit it to discharge its functions.
  • synthesizes macromolecules (proteins) for its own
    use or for export
  • The specific proteins produced are the 1 way
    that cells regulate function.
  • produces energy
  • is capable of communicating with other cells

5
Importance of Studying Cell Structure
Changes in cell structure provide important clues
about changes in cell function.
6
Changes in structure can indicate a great deal
about what functional changes are occurring
7
Importance of Studying Cell Structure
Changes in cell structure provide important clues
about pathologic changes. In pathologic
conditions cells exhibit either too much or not
enough of a normal function.
8
Liver Normal vs. Pathologic
Normal
Necrotic
Uniform Size
Round, open nuclei
Uniform, pink cytoplasm
Swollen Cells
Pyknotic Nuclei
Condensed Cells
Dead Cells
9
Simplistic View of Cell Function
Heart of control of cell function is synthesis
  • General (all cells)
  • Protein Factory
  • Reproduction
  • Specific (variation on above)
  • Liver cell detoxifies noxious substances
  • Neuron transmits nerve impulses

10
Protein Synthesis is at Heart of Everything the
Cell Does.
Cell as Protein Factory
11
Simplistic View of Cell Function
Specificity of function is product of what is
synthesized (i.e what genes are turned on).
DNA RNA Protein
Cellular control via mix of Proteins produced
Other Molecules
12
Evolution Cell Function is Reproduction
Reproduction requires protein synthesis.
13
Simplistic Regions of Cell
Inside
Nucleus
Outside
Nuclear Boundary
Outside Boundary
14
Lipid Bilayer Membrane forms boundary between
inside and out
Inside
Outside
(Plasma membrane is Archetype Cellular Membrane)
15
Cytoplasm
  • Protoplasm
  • Living substance of the cell
  • Divided into two compartments

16
Cytosol
  • Cytoplasmic matrix
  • mostly water
  • organelles -metabolically active structures that
    perform distinctive functions
  • inclusions - metabolic byproducts, storage forms
    of nutrients or inert crystals pigments

17
Central hydrophobic portion of membrane provides
barrier to diffusion of water and small water
soluble molecules
18
Material on the inside stays in and things on the
outside stay out except by specific and
controllable functions
Plasma Membrane is Selectively Permeable! Meaning,
it lets some materials pass through but not
others!
19
Plasma Membrane
  • Not visible with LM
  • By TEM
  • 8-10 nm thick
  • trilaminar structure -- unit membrane
  • two thin, dense lines
  • intervening light area
  • inner leaflet
  • outer leaflet

20
Plasma Membrane Molecular Composition
21
Fluid Mosaic Model
Proteins in cellular membranes float and move
laterally within the lipid bilayer
22
Phospholipid Bilayer
  • Phospholipids have a polar head located at
    surface of membrane
  • Nonpolar tail of 2 long fatty acid chains
  • total molecule is amphipathic

23
Membrane Structure
Hydrophillic Surfaces
Integral Membrane Proteins have Hydrophobic
Sequences
Hydrophobic Center
24
Phospholipids are Asymmetrically Distributed
Phosphatidylcholine and Sphingomyelin more
abundant in outer leaflet
Phosphatidylserine, Phosphatidylethanolamine
preferentially on inner leaflet
25
  • Integral proteins- span the entire lipid bilayer
  • Peripheral proteins- looser connection, usually
    cytoplasmic, often associated with 2
    messenger system or cytoskeletal apparatus

Lateral but not perpendicular movement possible
(without energy)
26
Cholesterol and unsaturated hydrocarbons of
phospholipids help determine fluidity
Hydrocarbon Chains
Cholesterol
27
Glycocalyx
  • Carbohydrate chains that are covalently linked
    to integral proteins or phospholipids
  • Form fuzzy coat on surface of cell

28
Glycocalyx
  • Added measure of protection to cells
  • Bind to substances outside of cell

29
Plasma Membrane Functions
  • Maintain structural integrity
  • Regulate permeability
  • Mediate cell-cell interactions
  • Recognize outside environment
  • Regulate transport of material in and out
  • Transduce signals

30
Plasma Membrane Protein Functions
Structural Transducers Receptors
Enzymes Channels Pumps
31
Transport Across Plasma Membranes
  • Exchange of materials and information is mediated
    between the internal and external cellular
    environments
  • Enables the cell to control the quality of its
    intercellular environment
  • Four Principle Mechanisms
  • passive diffusion active transport
  • facilitated diffusion bulk transport

32
Passive Diffusion
  • Entirely dependent on the presence of a
    concentration gradient across the membrane
  • Requires no input of energy
  • Allows lipids and lipid-soluble molecules to pass
    freely hydrophilic molecules are impermeable

33
Facilitated Diffusion
  • Concentration gradient dependent
  • Involves the movement of large hydrophilic
    molecules
  • Requires the presence of protein carrier
    molecules
  • No energy required

34
Active Transport
  • Operates against extreme concentration gradients
  • Sodium pump which exchanges Na for K
  • transmembrane protein complex (Na-KATPase)
  • ATP ADP to generate energy

35
Plasma Membrane Lateral Domains
Receptors transduce signal from outside cell to
inside cell (or vice versa) Once inside cell must
effect some change to be useful
General Paradigm of Receptor Initiated Cascades
Ligand
Physical change receptor protein Activation of Rx
(phosphorylation/dephosphorylation GDP/GTP etc.)
Active
Inactive
Influence on cellular function or DNA regulation
Amplification/control cascade
36
Vesicular Transport (Bulk)
  • Involves vesicle formation from membrane
  • Secretion of cell products into the external
    environment -- exocytosis
  • Transport of large molecules or small particles
    into the cell -- endocytosis
  • phagocytosis -- ingestion of particulate matter
  • pinocytosis
  • ingestion of substances in molecular dispersion
  • ingestion of bulk fluid by ionic changes

37
Endocytosis
38
Phagocytosis
39
Clathrin Coated Pits
  • Plasma membrane invaginates to form small pits
    -- caveolae -- which project into cell
  • Opening of pit constricts to form a narrow neck
    with further constriction resulting in separation
    of the vesicle from the membrane
  • Smooth walled or clathrin coated
  • Trap and concentrate specific receptor proteins
  • Function to bind and internalize ligands

40
Pinocytotic Vesicles
41
Plasma Membrane Lateral Domains
  • Junctional Specializations
  • macromolecular clusters of membrane constituents
    to provide specific environment for enhanced
    function

Tight Junction
42
Membrane Limited Organelles?
43
Membrane Limited Organelles can be thought of as
Continuous with Outside
44
Cordoning off of areas allows for localization of
specific functions to unique areas.
  • Specific Functions
  • Efficiency
  • Control

Molecular makeup of membranes different to
facilitate specific functions
45
Vesicular shuttling of contents between specific
regions (organelles) produces functional
continuity
46
Intracellular Transport
Anterograde
Plasmalemma Vesicles TGN Golgi RER
Retrograde
Plasmalemma Vesicles TGN Golgi RER
Other Organelles
47
Archetypal Anterograde Protein Synthesis
Secretion
48
Ribosomes and Protein Synthesis
  • Ribosomes catalyze the synthesis of proteins
    using the nucleotide sequence of mRNA to specify
    the sequence of AAs
  • If protein being synthesized has a signal
    sequence specific for rER, the ribosome binds to
    it
  • If no rER signal sequence, the ribosomes remain
    free in the cytoplasm and the newly synthesized
    protein enters the cytoplasm

49
Protein Synthesis Secretion
Step 1 Rough Endoplasmic Reticulum
Extensive rER is evidence of intense protein
synthesis
50
Rough Endoplasmic Reticulum
  • rER consists of interconnecting network of
    membrane-limited flattened sacs (cisternae)
  • Specialized for protein processing lipid
    biosynthesis
  • rER is continuous with the outer membrane of the
    nuclear envelope

51
Ribosomes
  • Stud the outsides of rER
  • Small particles (15-20 nm in diameter) composed
    of proteins and RNA
  • Composed of a large and small subunit that dont
    combine until protein synthesis begins

52
Protein Synthesis
  • Within the rER, proteins
  • As polypeptide chains grow, their signal sequence
    determines whether the protein folds up in the
    lipid bilayer (folded to form their 2 structure)
    or translocates into the lumen of the ER
  • Forms intra-chain di-sulfide bonds
  • are glycosylated

53
Proteins that remain in cytosol do not need to
cross membrane.
54
Step 2 Golgi Apparatus (Complex)
Protein Synthesis Secretion
rER
Movement of membrane and cargo between rER and
Golgi is primarily via vesicular transport
ERGIC
Golgi
55
Golgi Apparatus
  • Involved in post-translational modification,
    packaging and sorting of proteins
  • By EM, stacks of flattened membranes that are
    closely associated with vesicles

56
Golgi Apparatus
  • Polarized
  • forming face (FF) --outer or cis-Golgi
  • maturing face (MF) -- inner or trans-Golgi
  • As a result of a series of vesicle budding and
    fusion events, the membrane molecules and soluble
    proteins in the lumen pass through the stacks

57
Golgi Apparatus
  • Different Enzymes (Integral proteins) localized
    to different regions of stack

Trans
Medial
Cis
58
Golgi Compartmentalization allows sequential
processing
Maturation of carbohydrate chains by removal of
some sugars and addition of others
59
Step 3 Sorting in Trans Golgi Network (TGN)
Protein Synthesis Secretion
  • Secretory path is default Pathway in absence of
    specific sorting signal
  • Some sorting may use specific receptors

60
Secretory Granules
  • Vesicles appear granular because of coagulation
    of their contents
  • Secretory products are released from cell by
    exocytosis

61
Step 4 Trafficking of vesicle to plasma membrane
and release of contents
Protein Synthesis Secretion
62
Lysosomal Sorting in TGN
  • Lysosomal enzymes packaged and delivered to
    lysosomes

Many lysosomal enzymes have mannose 6-phosphate.
TGN has M-6-P receptor. This concentrates the
enzyme in small area for movement to lysosome.
63
Lysosomes
Membrane limited organelle containing hydrolytic
enzymes and having a low pH
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