67
Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

  • Upload
    emilie

  • View
    35

  • Download
    1

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell. Technology to study cells. light microscopes – pass visible light through specimen and lenses. magnification – ratio of image size to actual size. resolution – clarity of image; minimum distance between two distinguishable points. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

Chapter 6:A Tour of the Cell

Page 2: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

Technology to study cells

Page 3: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

light microscopes – pass visible light through specimen and lenses

Page 4: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

magnification – ratio of image size to actual size

Page 5: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

resolution – clarity of image; minimum distance between two

distinguishable points

Page 6: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

electron microscopes – focus beams of electrons through or onto specimen

– resolution 100x better than light microscopes

Page 7: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

scanning electron microscope (SEM) – studying external structures

Page 8: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

transmission electron microscope (TEM) – studying internal structures

Page 9: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

Cell Fractionation – take cells apart and isolate organelles

Page 10: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

Uses a centrifuge; spin test tubes very fast, separates cell components by size

and density

Page 11: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell
Page 12: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

Surface are to volume ratio:– limits cell size because as cells get bigger,

their volume increases faster than their surface area

Page 13: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

– surface area important for transport of substances through the membrane

microvilli in intestineincreases surface area for absorption

Page 14: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

All cells have:

• cytosol – semifluid substance containing organelles and dissolved nutrients

• plasma membrane – selective barrier

• chromosomes – packaged DNA

• ribosomes – make proteins

Page 15: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

Prokaryotic Cells

Page 16: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

Prokaryotic Cells

• smaller than eukaryotic cells• no membrane-bound organelles• no nucleus (nucleoid – region containing

prokaryotic DNA)• small ribosomes• circular DNA• plasmids

Page 17: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

Bacterial conjugation using pili

Page 18: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell
Page 19: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

Eukaryotic Cells

Page 20: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

nucleus – contains DNA

• nuclear envelope – double membrane that encloses nucleus

• nuclear pores – holes in the nuclear envelope. Allow passage of large molecules.

Page 21: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

• chromosomes – made of chromatin, a complex of proteins and DNA

• nucleolus – rRNA synthesized, ribosomes assembled

Page 22: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

ribosomes – synthesize proteins• made of ribosomal RNA

(rRNA) and protein• cells that synthesize many

proteins have many ribosomes

• either free-floating in cytosol (make proteins for cell’s use) or bound to rough ER (make proteins for secretion)

Page 23: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

endomembrane system• more than half the total membrane of the cell• consists of membranous tubules and sacs (cisternae)• lumen – interior cavity of cisternae

Page 24: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell
Page 25: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

smooth endoplasmic reticulum (ER)• no bound ribosomes• synthesizes lipids (phospholipids, oils,

steroids)• stores calcium ions, especially in muscles

(important to muscle contraction)

Page 26: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

Enzymes detoxify drugs and poisons, especially in the liver

• add hydroxyl groups to drugs; makes them more soluble

• drug tolerance due to proliferation of smooth ER in addicts; higher doses required to achieve the same effect

Page 27: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

rough endoplasmic reticulum (ER) • has bound ribosomes• continuous with nuclear envelope

Page 28: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

• helps in synthesis of secretory proteins (proteins made for secretion), especially glycoproteins – proteins that have carbohydrates on them

• adds carbohydrates to glycoproteins, sends them in transport vescicles (sacs of membrane) to Golgi

Page 29: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

• Also the membrane factory of cell; makes new membrane for itself that becomes vescicles; these eventually become part of cell membrane

Page 30: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

Golgi apparatus – products of ER modified, stored and then shipped

• flattened sacs (cisternae)

• cis face – receiving side

• trans face – shipping side

Page 31: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

• vescicles from ER fuse with cis face

and empy contents into lumen of

cisternae• products of ER modified in Golgi:

– modifies carbohydrates

– alters protein structure

Page 32: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

• Golgi makes some macromolecules• products transferred from one cisternae to

another, eventually arrive at trans face.• products sorted and “addressed” for where

they will go

Page 33: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

• vescicles bud off trans face and carry contents to cell membrane for export or to different parts of the cell

Page 34: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell
Page 35: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

Lysosomes – digest• membrane sac of hydrolytic enzymes• digests molecules and worn-out cell parts

(autophagy)

Page 36: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

phagocytosis – food particle engulfed by cell and contained

in vescicle

– vescicle merges with lysosome and

is digested

Page 37: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell
Page 38: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

Tay-Sachs disease – lysosomal disorder in humans, allows lipids to

accumulate in cells.

Page 39: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

Tay-Sachs

• Lipids accumulate in nervous tissue• Degeneration of mental and physical abilities• Seizures, paralysis• Death before age 4

Cherry-red spot on retina identifies Tay-Sachs

Page 40: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

Vacuoles

• membrane-bound sacs

• central vacuole – in plants, storage for nutrients and wastes, water

– membrane: tonoplast

Page 41: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

• food vacuoles – formed by phagocytosis

• contractile vacuoles – in protists, pump excess water out of cell

Page 42: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

Mitochondria – make cell energy • change molecular energy to cellular energy;

cell respiration

Page 43: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

• double membrane• outer membrane is

smooth• Inner membrane has

folds called cristae • intermembrane

space – between outer and inner membrane

• mitochondrial matrix – lumen within the inner membrane

Page 44: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

Chloroplasts – make carbohydrates

• a plastid (other plastids are amyloplasts (store starch in plants) and chromoplasts (contain pigments that color fruit and flowers)

• contain pigment chlorophyll

Page 45: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

• double membrane – outer membrane

smooth – inner membrane is

stacks of sacs called thylakoids• a stack of thylakoids is

a granum• fluid between granum

and outer membrame is stroma

Page 46: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

Peroxisomes

• sac containing enzymes that transfer hydrogen to oxygen, producing H2O2

• digestion of fats, detoxification of alcohol• not part of endomembrane system

(lysosomes are)

Page 47: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

Cytoskeleton

• support, maintain cell shape

• cell motility (movement): both movement of whole cell and parts of cell within.

• motor proteins – help cytoskeleton accomplish movement

Page 48: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

Microtubules • hollow tubes of 13 columns of tubulin dimers• 25 nm• -tubulin and -tubulin• cell shape (reists compression), cilia and

flagella, move chromosomes during cell division, organelle movement

Page 49: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

Microfilaments (actin filaments)

• 2 intertwined strands of actin• 7 nm • cell shape (resist force), muscle contraction,

cytoplasmic streaming, pseudopodia in amoeboid movement

Page 50: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

Intermediate filaments• thick cables of

fibrous protein• 8-12 nm • fibrous Keratin

protein• cell shape

(resist force), anchorage of nucleus and organelles

Page 51: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

Centosomes and centrioles• centrosome – region

near nucleus where microtubules grow out from

• centrioles – in animals, 9 sets of triplet microtubules that help organize mitotic spindle during cell division

Page 52: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

Cillia and flagella• 9 + 2 arrangement of microtubules• dynein arms are motor proteins

Page 53: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

flagella – a tail-like structure for cellular locomotion or moving liquid

past cell– made of microtubules

Page 54: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

cilia – a hair-like structure, for locomotion or moving liquid past cell

Page 55: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell
Page 56: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

• Dynein arms bend cilia and flagella• Dynein “walking”: arms of one microtubule

grip adjacent doublet, push it up, release, then repeat

Page 57: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

basal body – where cilium or flagellum is anchored to cell

• – 9 sets of triplet microtubules (9 x 3)• – a basal body of a sperm flagellum enters egg

and becomes a centriole

Page 58: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

Extracellular components of plants

Page 59: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

cell wall

• made of cellulose microfibrils and proteins. Protects, maintains shape, prevents too much water

• also in prokaryotes, fungi and some protists• primary cell wall – young cell wall. Thin and

flexible• secondary cell well – in woody plants. Grown

between membrane and primary wall.

Page 60: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

• middle lamella – between primary cell walls of adjacent cells. Rich in pectins (sticky polysaccharides). Glues cells together.

• plasmodesmata

Page 61: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

Animal Extracellular Matrix (ECM)

• Mostly glycoproteins; mainly collagen fibers

• Collagen embedded in a network of proteoglycans

Page 62: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

fibronectin – another glycoprotein in the ECM that binds integrins on cell

membrane

integrins – proteins that span the cell membrane and transmit info on changes

outside the cell to the cytoplasm

Page 63: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell
Page 64: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

• Changes in ECM my trigger changes in cells. • Integrins help relay signals to and from cells• Play role in coordinating behavior of all cells in

a tissue.

Page 65: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

Intercellular junctions

• Plasmodesmata (plants) – channels made by perforation in cell walls. Cytosol, water and nutrients passes through them, linking cells

• tight junctions (animals) – membranes of cells tightly pressed together, bound by proteins. Prevents leakage.

Page 66: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

tight juction

Page 67: Chapter 6: A Tour of the Cell

• desmosomes (animals) – fasten cells together into a strong sheet. Like rivets.

• gap junctions (animals) – channels between cells through which flow ions, sugars, other molecules. Useful in cell communication.