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Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac -2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first...

Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

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Page 1: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac

7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures

But first...

Page 2: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

Let’s Review

What is cell theory?

Light microscopes vs. electron microscopes

Prokaryotic vs. eukaryotic

Page 3: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

Basic Cell Structures Cell Membrane Cell Wall Nucleus Cytoplasm

Page 4: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

VOCABULARY

Chromatin Chromosome Nucleolus Nuclear envelope Cytoskeleton Microtubule Microfilament

Endoplasmic Reticulum

Golgi Apparatus Lysosome Vacuole Chloroplast Mitochondrion Ribosome

Page 5: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

Plasma Membrane

Boundary between cell and environment

Page 6: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

Allows for nutrients to enter and exit cell

Maintains cell’s homeostasis

Nerve cell plasma membrane

Page 7: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

How does plasma membrane maintain homeostasis? Selective permeability

Allows certain molecules in while keeping others out

Water usually enters/exits cells freely Ion (e.g. Ca and Na) allowed in at certain

times

Page 8: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

Structure of PM

Composed of 2 layers of phospholipids (oh no…not again!)

Page 9: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

Phospholipids Hydrophilic head (outside/inside of cell) Hydrophobic tail (inside of membrane) These form a barrier and do not allow

water-soluble molecules to pass through

Page 10: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

Fluid mosaic

Thin flexible layer

Page 11: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

What else is in the plasma membrane? Cholesterol

Aids in phospholipid stability by preventing them to stick together

Proteins Transport proteins

Help with allowing nutrients come in and wastes exit cell

Cell identification Cell structure and support

Page 12: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

Cytoplasm

Material inside the cell membrane but not including the nucleus

Cytoplasm

Page 13: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first
Page 14: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

Found in some cells, including plants, algae, fungi, and nearly all prokaryotes (NOT animal cells)

Cell Wall

Page 15: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

Surrounds the cell membrane (allows water and gases to pass through) Provides support and protection for the cell

Page 16: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

Nucleus

Nucleus (pl. Nuclei) Large structure that

contains the genetic information (DNA) and controls the cell’s activities

Page 17: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

DNA contains the instructions for making proteins

*the nucleus is important because making proteins is one of the main functions of cells

Protein Synthesis

Page 18: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

CHROMATIN & CHROMOSOMES:

Chromatin: DNA chain wound around a protein visible DNA (looks granular—is spread throughout the nucleus)

Chromosomes: when a cell divides, chromatin continues to condense into these structures

these are distinct structures

Page 19: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

NUCLEOLUS:

•Dense region inside most nuclei

(looks darker)

•Ribosome assembly begins here

NUCLEAR ENVELOPE:

•Double-membrane layer which surrounds nucleus

•Thousands of pores allow material into and out of the nucleus

Page 20: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

Nucleus

Page 21: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

Cytoskeleton

Network of protein filaments that helps the cell maintain shape & move

around

Help in cell division!!!

Page 22: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first
Page 23: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first
Page 24: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

Ribosomes

Ribosomes are made of RNA & protein

Proteins are assembled (made) here

Proteins are produced following the specific code in DNA

Page 25: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

ENDOPLASMIC RETICULUM (ER):

•Some proteins are modified

•Components of the cell membrane are assembled

ROUGH ER: ribosomes on the ER make proteins & these new proteins move into the ER where they may be chemically modified

SMOOTH ER: no ribosomes; contains specialized enzymes that perform specific tasks (ex: make lipids)

Page 26: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

WWWhat’s

missing??

W

Page 27: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

Real Picture…

“Fake” Picture

Page 28: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

GOLGI APPARATUS:

• Proteins produced by Rough ER ribosomes move into these sac-like structures

• Enzymes attach carbohydrates & lipids to the proteins

• These proteins are then sent to their final destination

Page 29: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

Lysosomes

Filled with digestive enzymes: break down carbo’s, lipids, & proteins for use by cell

Break down old cells

Page 30: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

Vacuoles Store materials

like water, salts, proteins, & carbo’s for the cell

Large central vacuole in plants is the reason plants are rigid!

Page 31: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

•PLANTS ONLY!

•Use energy from sun to make glucose (photosynthesis)

•Visible stacks of membranes

Page 32: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first
Page 33: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

Mitochondria

• Release energy from food—cell uses that energy to power growth, movement, etc.

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Page 35: Plasma Membrane of aveolar sac 7-2 and 7-3: Plasma Membrane and Cell Structures But first

Cilia and Flagella

Aid in locomotion or feeding