Title: The Cell Lecture 2
1 The Cell Lecture 2
- College Biology
- Southern Boone County Schools
- Bill Palmer
2The Cell
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4The Players
- Anton van Leeuwenhoek (Dutch) 1600s
- Pond water
- Invented Microscope
- Robert Hooke (English) 1600s
- Cork cells
5Hooks Cork Cells
6Leeuwenhoek
a
b
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8The Players-2
- Schleiden and Schwann
- Cell theory
- Schleiden (plants)
- Schwann (animals)
- Virchow (all living things)
9Cell Theory
- Every form of life is a cell, or is composed of
cells. - Every cell came from a previous cell.
10100 m
blue whale
10 m
human
1 m
10 cm
chicken egg
1 cm
1 mm
frog egg
100 µm
plant and animal cells
10 µm
cell nucleus
most bacteria
mitochondria
1 µm
smallest bacteria
100 nm
largest virus
10 nm
proteins
1 nm
lipids
atoms
0.1 nm
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13Microscope enlargements of the tip of this pin
show an abundance of life--in this case
bacteria--thriving on an object that we normally
think of as being devoid of living organisms. (a
x85 b x425 c x2100)
a
b
c
14Two Types of Cells
- Prokaryotes
- Bacteria
- Cyanobacteria
- Eukaryotes
- Plants
- Animals
- Fungi
- Protists
15Prokaryotes
Eukaryotes
Fig. 4.2
within membrane- bound nucleus
in nucleoid region
usually smaller
usually larger
usually single-celled
often multi-celled
O2
O2
O2
usually needs oxygen to exist
O2
O2
O2
O2
may not need oxygen
no membrane- bound organelles
Membrane-bound organelles
16Bacteria Cells Reproducing (Asexually)
So why is the world not taken over by bacteria?
17Bacteria Growth
- LAG PHASE Growth is slow at first, while the
"bugs" acclimate to the food and nutrients in
their new habitat. - LOG PHASE Once the metabolic machinery is
running, they start multiplying exponentially,
doubling in number every few minutes.
18Bacteria Growth
- STATIONARY PHASE As more and more bugs are
competing for dwindling food and nutrients,
booming growth stops and the number of bacteria
stabilizes. - DEATH PHASE Toxic waste products build up, food
is depleted and the bugs begin to die.
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20Phagocytosis
White blood cell attacking bacteria.
21Eukaryotic Cells
22Main Regions
nucleus
cytosol
cytoskeleton
other organelles
Cell membrane
Eukaryotic cell
23CONTROL CENTER (nucleus)
ASSEMBLY LINE (endoplasmic reticulum)
STRUCTURE (cytoskeleton)
WORK BENCHES (ribosomes)
DISTRIBUTION CENTER (Golgi complex)
POWERHOUSES (mitochondria)
CLEANING CREW (lysosomes)
SECURITY GATE (cell membrane)
24The Nucleus(Control center)
- Contains most of the genes that control the
eukaryotic cell (DNA) - Generally the most conspicuous organelle
25The Nucleus(Control center)
- mRNA (messenger RNA) copies DNA and leaves
nucleus to make proteins
26nucleolus
nuclear envelope
DNA
DNA
mRNA
inner membrane
outer membrane
nuclear pore
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28nucleus
ribosomes
rough endoplasmic reticulum
Golgi complex
cell membrane
29Ribosomes (work benches)
- Site where cells make proteins
- 2 types (different kinds perform different tasks)
- Free Ribosomes (within cytosol)
- Bound Ribosomes (Rough Endoplasmic Reticulum)
30Ribosomes and the Rough Endoplasmic Reticulum
31- Proteins
- What do they do?
-
32Everything!!
- support
- movement
- storage
- signaling
- structure
- chemical reactions
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34Monomer
- Amino Acids
- 20 kinds
- Some books as many as 23
- At least one can not be made by plants.
35Polymer
- Polypeptide many amino acids together
- Foldedproteins
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41Endoplasmic Reticulum(assembly line)
- Interconnected membranes that form channels and
canals within the cytoplasm - Move substances from one part of the cell to
another
42Endoplasmic Reticulum(assembly line)
- 2 types
- Interconnected membranes that form channels and
canals within the cytoplasm - Smooth ER (site of lipid synthesis and
detoxification) - Rough ER
43nucleus
ribosomes
rough endoplasmic reticulum
Golgi complex
Cell membrane
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45Golgi Complex(Distribution Center)
- Modifies, sorts, and ships proteins
- The UPS man
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47from RER
cisternae
cisternal spaces
Golgi complex
vesicle
to plasma membrane
to cytosol
for export out of cell
P
P
1. Side chains are edited. 2. Vesicles formed
for protein transport.
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49p.75
50Cell membrane(security gate)
- Fluid (moving) mosaic (made of multiple proteins)
model
51Cell membrane(security gate)
- Major Functions
- Keeps stuff in
- Keeps stuff out
- Transport
- Communication
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53nucleus
ribosomes
rough endoplasmic reticulum
Golgi complex
cell membrane
54Lysosomes(Cleaning Crew)
- Digestive compartments used to hydrolyze (break
down) proteins, polysaccharides (sugars), fats,
and nucleic acids.
55CELLULAR RECYCLING
lysosome
worn-out organelle
digestive enzymes
fusion
digestion
small molecules returned to cytosol
molecules recycled to make new organelles
waste expelled from cell
56Mitochondria(Powerhouse)
- Use Oxygen to convert food energy (from sugars,
fats, and other fuels) to ATP (used for our
bodys energy needs)
57Mitochondria(Powerhouse)
- ATPAdenosine TriPhosphate
- ATP is like a storage battery
- Changes from ATP to ADP and back
- Krebs Cycle
58mitochondrion
outer membrane
inner membrane
water carbon dioxide ATP
food oxygen
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60The Cytoskeleton( Internal Scaffolding)
- Protein fibers
- give cells shape
- anchor organelles
- allow movement
61CHANGE SHAPE
MOVEMENT
MAINTAIN SHAPE
p.83
62SHAPE CHANGE
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64MAINTAIN SHAPE
65MOVEMENT
66Functions of Microtubules
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70nucleus
smooth and rough endoplasmic reticulum
ribosomes
cytoskeleton
cytosol
mitochondria
plasma membrane
PLANT CELL
ANIMAL CELL
71smooth endoplasmic reticulum
DNA
nucleolus
rough endoplasmic reticulum
plasma membrane
free ribosomes
cytoskeleton
Golgi complex
cytosol
CHLOROPLAST
mitochondria
CENTRAL VACUOLE
CELL WALL
72Plant Cells vs. Animal Cells
- Plant Cells
- Cell wall
- Strength and protection
- Limit water absorption
- Central vacuole
- Storing nutrients and water
- Metabolism and waste management
- Plastids
- Gather/store nutrients and pigments
- Chloroplasts
73Chloroplasts
outer membrane
inner membrane
water
sugar (food)
carbon dioxide
oxygen
minerals
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75Vacuole (Bubble)
- Storage sac
- Water, Proteins, Inorganic molecules (potassium,
chloride, etc.),Disposal site, Pigments (e.g.
color of a petal),Toxins - Maintains cell shape
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77Wrap up
- 1. Who are the major players in the cell and what
did they do? - 2. What is the cell theory?
- 3. What are the differences between prokaryotes
and eukaryotes?
78Wrap up
- 4. What are the major components of a cell and
what are their functions? - 5. What is a protein?
- 6. What are the differences between plant and
animal cells? - 7. What are the phases of bacteria growth?
79Wrap up
- 8. List five functions of proteins.9.
- 9. Using numerical steps, describe how a protein
is made.