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TOPIC 1.1: CELLS 1.1 CELL THEORY 1.1 OUTLINE THE CELL THEORY. All living organisms are composed of cells. Multicellular organisms (example: humans) are composed of many cells while unicellular organisms (example: bacteria) are composed of only one cell. Cells are the basic unit of structure in all organisms. Cells are the smallest unit of life. They are the smallest structures capable of surviving on their own. Cell structure is correlated to cellular function Cells come from pre-exsisting cells and cannot be created from non-living material. For example, new cells arise from cell division and a zygote (the very first cell formed when an organism is produced) arises from the fusion of an egg cell and a sperm cell. FIGURE 6.3 Light Microscopy (LM) Electron Microscopy (EM) Brightfield (unstained specimen) Confocal Longitudinal section of cilium Cross section of cilium 50 m Cilia 50 m Brightfield (stained specimen) 2 m 2 m Deconvolution 10 m Phase-contrast Differential-interferencecontrast (Nomarski) Super-resolution 10 m 1 m Fluorescence Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) FIGURE 6.3A 50 m Brightfield (unstained specimen) FIGURE 6.3B Brightfield (stained specimen) DISCUSS THE EVIDENCE FOR THE CELL THEORY Discuss: Give an account including, where possible, a range of arguments for and against the relative importance of various factors, or comparisons of alternative hypotheses. a. All living things are made of cells: When living things are observed under the microscope they consistently appear to be composed of cells. However, there are a number of examples that do not conform to the standard notion of what a cell looks like at the microscopic level. [slides: skeletal muscle, Red Blood Cells (RBC’s), epidermis} EXCEPTIONS THAT TEST THE RULE OF CELL THEORY: Muscle cells: challenges the idea that a cell has one nucleus. Muscle cells have more than one nucleus per cell Muscle Cells called fibres can be very long (300mm). They are surrounded by a single plasma membrane but they are multi-nucleated. (many nuclei). This does not conform to the standard view of a small single nuclei within a cell 9b Skeletal muscle, LS, H&E. High mag. Not all the nuclei are muscle nuclei, some are likely to be in fibroblasts of the endomysial LCT and one or two might be satellite cells, the stem cells that allow muscle regeneration after traumatic injury.[http://web.as.uky.edu/biology/faculty/bonner/HISTOLOGY/Muscle/muscle.htm] FUNGAL CELLS: CHALLENGES THE IDEA THAT A CELL IS A SINGLE UNIT. Fungal Hyphae: again very large with many nuclei and a continuous cytoplasm The tubular system of hyphae form dense networks called mycelium. Like muscle cells they are multi-nucleated They have cell walls composed of chitin The cytoplasm is continuous along the hyphae with no end cell wall or membrane PROTOCTISTA: CHALLENGES THE IDEA THAT A CELL IS SPECIALISED TO A SINGLE FUNCTION. Yet, the protoctista can carry out all functions of life. A cell capable of all necessary functions Amoeba Single celled organisms have one region of cytoplasm surrounded by a cell membrane. The protoctista cell is unusual in that it performs all functions. Such cells are usually much larger than other cells such that some biologist consider them 'acellular', that is, non-cellular. This is an image of an amoeba. A single cell protoctista capable of all essential functions. What cell organelles can you see? B. CELLS ARE THE SMALLEST UNIT OF LIFE. The cell is the smallest unit of organization that can show all the characteristics of living processes. Organelles often require the cooperation of other organelles for their successful function. Interested students should research the concept of endosymbiont theory. C. CELLS COME ONLY FROM OTHER CELLS. Cells carry out a form of cell division to form new cells. This process of cell replication in eukaryotes is called mitosis and in prokaryotes is called binary fission. The parental cell divides to produce identical daughter cells. This aspect of cell theory suggests that all cells therefore have a common ancestor, the original ancestral cell form which all other cells have arisen by descent. (origin of cellular life). This relationship of common ancestor suggest therefore that all organisms are related. TOK: CELL THEORY REPLACES THE FORMER IDEAS spontaneous generation or abiogenesis in which inanimate matter assembles itself into living forms. This was particularly believed to be the case in out breaks of diseases. Germ Theory These ideas are then replaced by the work of Francesco Redi, Agostino Bassi, John Snow and Louis Pasteur. There still remains the necessary idea however that at some point cellular life developed from non-cellular form. How does the multinucleated cytoplasm of fungal hyphae and skeletal muscles bring the cell theory into question? The cell theory states that cells are the smallest unit of life and that organisms are made of cells. Both skeletal muscle cells and fungal hyphae are made from elongated cytoplasm with more than one nucleus. These structures are a problem for cell theory because they are not strictly made of cells. How does Acetabularium, the giant algal cell that can grow up to 10 cm in length and has three distinct body parts, disturb the cell theory? Cell theory states that organisms are made of cells. Acetabularium is a whole organism and it is larger than a cell. This disturbs the cell theory because it seems to break the rule that all organisms are made of cells by not itself being made of cells "Omnis cellula e cellula" (Cells originate from cells) is what R Virchow stated. But where did the first cells come from? There is some evidence that organic molecules could form in the 'primordial soup' of the early Earth's atmosphere. Some of these molecules, like RNA or enzymes are thought to be capable of reproducing themselves. Other molecules have properties similar to parts of a membrane. They could form the main parts of a cell. This is a question which cannot be answered fully by science. It is not possible to observe the process happening, nor to recreate accurately the conditions of the early earth's atmosphere. COMPARE THE RELATIVE SIZES CELLS USING THE APPROPRIATE SI UNIT Compare: means to Give an account of similarities and differences between two (or more) items, referring to both (all) of them throughout. Molecules cell membrane thickness Viruses Bacteria organelles and cells, 10 m Human height 1m 0.1 m Length of some nerve and muscle cells Chicken egg 1 cm Unaided eye Frog egg 1 mm Human egg Most plant and animal cells 10 m 1 m 100 nm Nucleus Most bacteria Mitochondrion Smallest bacteria Viruses Ribosomes 10 nm Proteins Lipids 1 nm 0.1 nm Small molecules Atoms Superresolution microscopy Electron microscopy 100 m Light microscopy FIGURE 6.2 FIGURE 6.2A 10 m 1m 0.1 m Length of some nerve and muscle cells Chicken egg 1 cm Frog egg 1 mm 100 m Human egg Unaided eye Human height 1 cm Frog egg 100 m 10 m 1 m 100 nm Human egg Most plant and animal cells Nucleus Most bacteria Mitochondrion Smallest bacteria Viruses Ribosomes 10 nm Proteins Lipids 1 nm 0.1 nm Small molecules Atoms Superresolution microscopy Electron microscopy 1 mm Light microscopy FIGURE 6.2B 1. Molecules of Biological significance are around 1 nm in size where as the cell membrane is about ten times thicker at 10nm. 2. Where as a virus is ten times larger again at around 100nm. 3. Where as a bacteria is ten times larger again at around 1 um. 4. Where as a eukaryotic animal cell is ten time larger again at around 10 um. 5. Where as a eukaryotic plant cell is ten times larger again at around 100 um. FIGURE 6.6A Outside of cell Inside of cell 0.1 m (a) TEM of a plasma membrane FIGURE 6.7 Surface area increases while total volume remains constant 5 1 1 Total surface area [sum of the surface areas (height width) of all box sides number of boxes] 6 150 750 Total volume [height width length number of boxes] 1 125 125 Surface-to-volume (S-to-V) ratio [surface area volume] 6 1.2 6 As the size of a structure increases the surface area to volume ratio decreases. The rate of exchange of substances therefore depends on the organism's surface area that is in contact with the surroundings. Reason: as organisms get bigger their volume and surface area both get bigger, but not by the same amount. The volume increases as the cube but the area of the surface only increases by the square. EXAMPLE: GAS EXCHANGE OF OXYGEN FOR RESPIRATION. A cell which respires aerobically demands oxygen for the process. Oxygen is obtained form the surrounding environment such as water or blood (depends on the cell). Oxygen diffuses across the cell membrane. More membrane more diffusion (Surface area= increases by the 2). Bigger cell (Volume = increases by the 3). However the ratio of surface area2 : volume 3 is decreasing Therefore the volume of oxygen obtained for each unit of cell volume is actually decreasing Cells must not get too big because they cannot obtain sufficient oxygen to satisfy the demands of the cell. WHY CELLS ARE SMALL (REASONING): Size is a limiting Factors for cell because: A big cell needs more oxygen than a little cell Big cells need to have more oxygen diffusion across the cell membrane. But the big cell has relatively small surface area compared to its volume i.e. the surface area: volume ratio is small. What ever other benefits a cell might gain from being big, it cannot become larger than is limited by the rate of gas exchange. This reasoning can be applied to nutrients and to waste, anything that is exchanged across the cell surface. Try preparing a reason why size is a limiting factor for: Obtaining nutrient (glucose) Excretion of waste molecules ( urea, ammonia, carbon dioxide). CONCLUSIONS: As the organism gets bigger its surface area : volume ratio decreases This rule is a limiting factor for cell size. As the cell gets bigger the ratio decreases If the ratio decreases the rate of exchange decreases EXPLAIN THE IMPORTANCE OF THE SURFACE AREA TO VOLUME RATIO AS A FACTOR LIMITING CELL SIZE Explain means to give a detailed account of causes, reasons or mechanisms. Metabolic requirements set upper limits on the size of cells The surface area to volume ratio of a cell is critical As the surface area increases by a factor of n2, the volume increases by a factor of n3 Small cells have a greater surface area relative to volume © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. STATE THAT MULTICELLULAR ORGANISMS SHOW EMERGENT PROPERTIES State: means to give a specific name, value or other brief answer without explanation or calculation. EMERGENT PROPERTIES: “THE WHOLE IS GREATER THAN THE SUM OF ITS PARTS.” Emergent properties result from the arrangement and interaction of parts within a system Emergent properties characterize nonbiological entities as well For example, a functioning bicycle emerges only when all of the necessary parts connect in the correct way Emergence is the occurrence of unexpected characteristics or properties in a complex system. These properties emerge from the interaction of the ‘parts’ of the system. cells form tissues, tissues form organs, organs form organ systems and organ systems form multicellular organisms. The idea is that the whole is greater than the composition of its parts. For example your lungs are made of many cells. However, the cells by themselves aren’t much use. It is the many cells working as a unit that allow the lungs to perform their function. As a model consider the electric light bulb. The bulb is the system and is composed of a filament made of tungsten, a metal cup, and a glass container. We can study the parts individually how they function and the properties they posses. These would be the properties of : Tungsten Metal cup Glass container. CELL DIFFERENTIATION Key Points: Cells become different and specialize their function Cells in multicellular organisms undergo reproduce themselves by mitosis. Each cell contains all 23 pairs of chromosomes Most of the genes will be turned off if the cell does not require for their function (i.e. a liver cell would not have genes turned on for eye function. Genes switched on are associated with ‘house-keeping’ i.e. respiration to keep the cell alive Differentiation of groups of cells produce specialized tissues Epithelial Neurons Cartilage Skeletal muscle Smooth muscle adipose Bone EXPLAIN THAT CELLS IN MULTICELLULAR ORGANISMS DIFFERENTIATE TO CARRY OUT SPECIALIZED FUNCTIONS BY EXPRESSING SOME OF THEIR GENES BUT NOT OTHERS As a general principle the larger a multicellular organisms become the more diversity and differentiated specialisms there are within the organism. Rather than all cells carrying out all functions, tissues and organs specialize to particular functions. These organs and systems are then integrated to give the whole organism (with its emergent properties). DIFFERENTIATION: CELLS WITHIN A MULTI CELLULAR ORGANISM SPECIALIZE THEIR FUNCTION. Specialized cells have switched on particular genes (expressed) that correlate to these specialist functions. These specific gene expressions produce particular shapes, functions and adaptations within a cell. Therefore a muscle cell will express muscle genes but not those genes which are for nerve cells. What is the benefit of differentiation and specialization of tissues rather than all tissues carrying out all functions? QUIZ 3 1. 2. 3. 4. How many pairs of chromosomes does a liver cell have? Does every cell utilize all of the genes in their nucleus. What does the term differentiate mean? What is a stem cell? 5. HOW DOES THE SURFACE AREA TO VOLUME RATIO CHANGE WITH AN INCREASE IN CELL SIZE? IN A MULTI CELLULAR ORGANISM SPECIALIZATION IS MORE EFFICIENT THAN THE GENERALIZED PLAN WHEN COMPETING FOR A SPECIFIC RESOURCE. CONSIDER THE ROLE OF WATER TRANSPORT THROUGH THE PLANT: In higher plants we have specialization to for a tubular system called the xylem. This is more efficient way of water transport than simply been passed by the mass movement of water from cell to cell. In the xylem water can be moved very efficiently from underground to the canopy of the highest trees at very little cost to the plant. If there is no specialized tissue for carrying water then the plant would rely on the movement of water by mass flow of diffusion which is very slow. The plant is therefore limited in size and therefore cannot compete with larger species. STATE THAT UNICELLULAR ORGANISMS CARRY OUT ALL THE FUNCTIONS OF LIFE State: to give a specific name, value or other brief answer without explanation or calculation. The 7 Properties of life include: Order—the highly ordered structure that typifies life, 2. Reproduction—the ability of organisms to reproduce their own kind, 3. Growth and development—consistent growth and development controlled by inherited DNA, 4. Energy processing—the use of chemical energy to power an organism’s activities and chemical reactions, 1. Response to the environment—an ability to respond to environmental stimuli, 6. Regulation—an ability to control an organism’s internal environment within limits that sustain life, and 7. Evolutionary adaptation—adaptations evolve over many generations as individuals with traits best suited to their environments have greater reproductive success and pass their traits to offspring. 5. FIGURE 1.1 (3) Growth and development (1) Order (4) Energy processing (2) Reproduction (6) Regulation (5) Response to the environment (7) Evolutionary adaptation Differentiation depends on gene expression which is regulated mostly during transcription. It is an advantage for multicellular organisms as cells can differentiate to be more efficient unlike unicellular organisms who have to carry out all of the functions within that one cell. STATE THAT STEM CELLS RETAIN THE CAPACITY TO DIVIDE AND HAVE THE ABILITY TO DIFFERENTIATE ALONG DIFFERENT PATHWAYS A stem cell retains the capacity to divide and has the ability to differentiate along different pathways. A stem cell is able to divide but has not yet expressed genes to specialize to a particular function. Under the right conditions stem cells can be induced to express particular genes and differentiate into a particular type of cell. Stem cells can be obtained from a variety of different places including the blastocyst. Adults still posses stem cells in some organs but much less so than a child. Even the placenta can be a useful source of stem cells. 3 PLACES WE CAN OBTAIN STEM CELLS 1. 2. 3. Embryonic stem cells Umbilical cord Adult stem cells 1. Bone marrow STEM CELLS AND THE REPLACEMENT OF CELLULAR ELEMENTS The cellular elements of blood wear out and are being replaced constantly Erythrocytes, leukocytes, and platelets all develop from a common source of stem cells in the red marrow of bones (pluripotent), especially ribs, vertebrae, sternum, and pelvis The hormone erythropoietin (EPO) stimulates erythrocyte production when O2 delivery is low © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. FIGURE 42.19 Stem cells (in bone marrow) Myeloid stem cells Lymphoid stem cells B cells T cells Erythrocytes Neutrophils Basophils Lymphocytes Monocytes Platelets Eosinophils THERAPEUTIC USE OF STEM CELLS Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma is a cancerous disease of the lymphatic system. Outline of the disease. 1. patient requires heavy does of radiation and or chemotherapy. This will destroy health blood tissue as well as the diseased tissue. 2. Blood is filtered for the presence of peripheral stem cells. Cells in the general circulation that can still differentiate into different types of blood cell otherwise known as stem cells. 3. Bone marrow can be removed before treatment. 4. Chemotherapy supplies toxic drugs to kill the cancerous cells. 5. Radiation can be used to kill the cancerous cells. In time however the cancerous cells adapt to this treatment so that radiation and chemotherapy are often used together. 6. Post radiation/ chemotherapy means that the patients health blood tissues is also destroyed by the treatment. 7. Health stem cells or marrow cells can be transplanted back to produce blood cells again EMBRYONIC STEM CELL This animation is an introduction to the use of embryonic stem cell for therapies. THERAPEUTIC CLONING . This is a method of obtaining ES (embryonic stem) cells from someone who has already been born. These stem cells can be used to treat the individual without generating an immune response. The human body recognizes and attacks foreign cells, including stem cells. This is a serious barrier to stem cell therapy. The process of therapeutic cloning is shown in the following diagram. (next slide) It begins by taking a somatic (body) cell from the individual. The nucleus of the somatic cell is fused with an egg that has had its nucleus removed. The resulting cell is genetically identical to the individual because it contains the DNA from the individual’s somatic cell. The new cell behaves like a fertilized egg and develops into a blastocyst. ES cells can be harvested from the blastocyst and grown in culture. These ES cells could be used to treat the individual without encountering resistance from his or her immune system. 1. The patient requires the replacement of some diseased tissue. First we obtain a healthy cell from the same patient. 2. At the same time we require a human egg cell. This is mainly as the cell retains the tendency to divide unlike the sample tissue from the patient. 3. The nucleus is removed from the egg and discarded. The cell body itself is retained. 4. The nucleus of the patients cell is removed and retained. The cell body of the patients cell is discarded. 5. The nucleus from the patients cell is transferred to the enucleated cell body. 6. The cells then stimulated to divide forming a clone. 7. The cell mass forms a blastocyst. 8. The inner cell mass becomes a source of totipotent stem cells. Totipotent means they are capable of being stimulated to become one of any type of cell. 9. Cells are stimulated using differentiation factors to become the type of cell required for therapy. 10. Therapy would require the transfer of the new healthy cell to the patient. In therapeutic cloning these cells have the same immune system identity as the patient therefore there is not immune rejection problem. It is important that this technique is not confused with embryonic stem cell cultures or with reproductive cloning. Notice that we do not refer to this type of blastocyst as an embryo. This is because, technically speaking, an embryo is the result of the union of an egg and a sperm, which has not happened in this case. STARGARDT’S DISEASE Inherited (genetic) Recessive allele Destroys retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) If RPE cells do not function the photoreceptors will degenerate. Gradual loss of central vision Stem Cells Use Aims to replace RPE cells with healthy RPE cells derived from embryonic stem cells These healthy cells are injected into the affected area of the eye Results from trial show cells have survived & multiplied leading to improved vision. POTENTIAL QUESTIONS Questions to answer: What is differentiation? What is the difference between differentiation and specialization? What are stem cells? Where are stem cells found? What can stem cells be used for?