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A Tour of the Cell A Tour of the Cell (Chapter 6) (Chapter 6)

A Tour of the Cell

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A Tour of the Cell. (Chapter 6). The Discovery of the Cell: Hooke. In 1665, Robert Hooke used an early compound microscope to look at a thin slice of cork, which is a plant material. He noticed that cork looked like thousands of tiny, empty chambers which he called “cells” - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: A Tour of the Cell

A Tour of the CellA Tour of the Cell

(Chapter 6)(Chapter 6)

Page 2: A Tour of the Cell

The Discovery of the Cell:Hooke

•In 1665, Robert Hooke used an early compound microscope to look at a thin slice of cork, which is a plant material.

•He noticed that cork looked like thousands of tiny, empty chambers which he called “cells”

•We now know cells are the basic units of life.

Page 3: A Tour of the Cell

The Discovery of the Cell:Von Leeuwenhoek

• The existence of cells was unknown for many years, but this changed with the invention of the microscope.

• Anton von Leeuwenhoek used a single-lens microscope to observe pond water and other things.

• The microscope revealed a world of tiny living organisms.

Page 4: A Tour of the Cell

Developing the Cell Theory•In 1838, Matthias Schleiden

concluded that all plants were made of cells.

•In 1839, Theodor Schwann stated that all animals were made of cells.

•In 1855, Rudolph Virchow concluded that new cells were created only from division of pre-existing cells.

•These discoveries led to the cell theory.

Page 5: A Tour of the Cell

Compound Light Microscope

• Combination of lenses and light used to magnify small objects held on a slide

•Live specimen may be observed (ie, pond water)

•Max magnification = 1000x

Page 6: A Tour of the Cell

Electron Microscopes• Image produced on a computer screen using a

beam of electrons rather than light• More powerful (300,000x or more) than light

microscopes, but specimen cannot be alive– Transmission

• Study of inner structure of a specimen• Samples are cut into thin slices for viewing• Images are 2-D

– Scanning• Allows study of specimen surface• Images are 3-D

Page 7: A Tour of the Cell

Images from Electron Microscopes

Page 8: A Tour of the Cell

The Cell Theory• All living things are

composed of cells.• Cells are the basic

units of structure and function in living things.

• New cells are produced from pre-existing cells.

Page 9: A Tour of the Cell

Self-Assessment• What are the three key ideas of the cell

theory? • What scientists contributed to the

development of the cell theory? How did they contribute?

• Identify the type of microscope most useful for viewing each of the following: – A group of cells in a thin layer of onion skin– The details of the surface of a human hair– The detailed structure of a mitochondria

inside a muscle cell

Page 10: A Tour of the Cell

Two Types of Cells•All cells are surrounded by a barrier called a cell membrane and contain DNA•Eukaryotic cells contain a nucleus & membrane organelles. (plants, animals, fungi & protists.) •Prokaryotic cells do NOT contain a nucleus (still have DNA) and most organelles (do have ribsomes) and are classified as bacteria.

Page 11: A Tour of the Cell

Cell Boundaries• All cells are surrounded by a thin,

flexible barrier, the plasma or cell membrane, which acts as a gate-keeper, regulating what enters and leaves the cell, and also provides some protection and support

• Many cells also produce a strong supporting layer around the membrane known as a cell wall. The main function of the cell wall is support and protection for the cell.

Page 12: A Tour of the Cell

Structure of the Cell Membrane

• The composition of nearly all cell membranes is a double-layered sheet called a lipid bilayer.

Lipid bilayer

Page 13: A Tour of the Cell

Functions of the Plasma Membrane

• Embedded enzyme proteins help carry out chemical reactions of the cell

• Receptor proteins allow to receive chemical messages

• Surface molecules allow recognition & communication between cells

• Transport proteins serve as channels or pumps to move materials in and out of cells

• Proteins from adjacent cells allow intracellular joining

Page 14: A Tour of the Cell

Diffusion Through Cell Boundaries

• Particles in a solution tend to move from an area where they are more concentrated to an area where they are less concentrated. (visualize this as a downhill movement, [high] to [low])

• This process is called diffusion• When the concentration of the solute is the

same throughout a system, the system has reached equilibrium.

Page 15: A Tour of the Cell

Osmosis• The diffusion of water through a

selectively permeable membrane.

Page 16: A Tour of the Cell

Osmotic Pressure & Tonicity

• If you compare two solutions, the more concentrated solution (less water) is hypertonic.

• The more dilute (more water) solution is hypotonic.

• When the concentration is equal in both solutions, the solution is described as isotonic.

Page 17: A Tour of the Cell

Effect of Tonicity on Cells

Page 18: A Tour of the Cell

Facilitated Diffusion• Cell membranes have protein channels that act as

channels (pores) or carrier molecules, making it easy for certain molecules to cross.

• The movement of specific molecules across cell membranes through protein channels is known as facilitated diffusion.

• This process usually involves solute molecules (rather than solvent molecules) and is a form of passive transport because it requires no energy, ([high] to [low])

Page 19: A Tour of the Cell

Active Transport• Active transport involves the use of energy (ATP) to

move substances across a cell membrane• Ex) Movement of materials in the opposite direction

from which the materials would normally move - against a concentration difference

• This is achieved by membrane proteins that act as pumps

• Visualize this as UPHILL, [low] to [high])• Large materials also move by active transport regardless of concentration gradient

Page 20: A Tour of the Cell

Active Transport of Large Materials(“Bulk Transport”)

• Endocytosis is the process of taking large materials into the cell using vesicles, or pockets, of the cell membrane. (endo=enter)

– Phagocytosis – cell “eating”; actively moving solids into the cell

– Pinocytosis – cell “drinking”; actively moving liquids into the cell

• Exocytosis, the membrane of the vesicle surrounding the material fuses with the cell membrane, forcing the contents out of the cell (exo=exit)

Page 21: A Tour of the Cell

Summary Assessment• What is the difference between active and

passive transport?• Name and describe three examples of each.• Distinguish between hypotonic, hypertonic and

isotonic solutions. – Explain what will happen to an animal cell in each.– Explain what will happen to a plant cell in each.