Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Cells Chapter 7 The Cell Theory • All living things are composed of cells • Cells are the basic unit of structure and function in living things • New cells are produced from existing cells • Bacteria Prokaryotic Cells – Very small cells – Have cell wall – No nucleus – No membrane bound organelles Eukaryotic Cells • Much larger than prokaryotic cells • Animals, plants, fungi, protists – DNA is stored in nucleus – Membrane bound organelles – May or may not have cell wall What is an organelle? • It is a part of the cell that performs a particular function Organelle Wanted Poster • Your team has been hired by the microscopic FBI to create WANTED! posters for cell organelles. • You will be given an organelle by your agency contact (Mrs. Maxwell), and you must create a wanted poster with the following information: • The organelle name. • A drawing of what the organelle looks like (both by itself and in a cell). • A description of why the cell organelle is WANTED. – You will need to include what the organelle actually does in a cell. You may also note what crimes the organelle has committed. • Any friends the organelle has (i.e. other organelles that might be in its gang). • What type of cell this organelle might be found in. • The reward for information leading to the arrest of this organelle. • Cell Wall – Made up of Cellulose – Adds rigidity to the cell – Protects the cell – Found only in plants, fungi, bacteria, some protists • Cell Membrane – Allows materials into and out of the cell – Flexible barrier – Made of Phospholipids with proteins scattered throughout • Cytoplasm – Everything inside the cell • The jelly-like cytosol, cytoskeleton and all organelles • Nucleus – Control center of the cell – Where DNA is stored – Largest organelle in animal cells • Nucleolus – Contains RNA needed to make ribosomes • Chromatin – Unorganized strands of DNA bound with Proteins • Chromosomes – Highly organized and condensed DNA – Only seen during cell division • Mitochondrion – Site of cellular respiration – Sugars are broken down into ATP (energy) – “Powerhouse” of the cell – Found in plant and animal cells • Chloroplast – Found only in plant cells – Site of Photosynthesis – Contain Chlorophyll Endosymbiosis • Simply stated, the theory of endosymbiosis is the concept that mitochondria and chloroplasts are the result of years of evolution initiated by the endocytosis of bacteria and blue-green algae which, instead of becoming digested, became symbiotic. • Chlorophyll – Green pigment found in chloroplasts that captures sunlight needed for photosynthesis • Vacuole – In plants, it is a large storage area for water, salts, carbohydrates and other nutrients – In animals, it is much smaller – Also plays a part in intracellular digestion • Lysosome – Small digestive sacs found in animal cells – Contains enzymes needed to break down food particles and discarded organelles • Endoplasmic Reticulum – Smooth ER makes lipids for membranes – Rough ER contains ribosomes for making proteins associated with the membrane • Golgi Apparatus – The “post office” of the cell – Packages and sends proteins to different parts of the cell • Ribosome – Site of protein synthesis – Not membrane bound so prokaryotes also have them • Centrioles – Small barrel like structures in animal cells that may aid in cell division • Vesicles – Carry proteins that have been sorted and modified by the golgi apparatus Review Cell Membrane • The job of the membrane is to regulate what comes into and leaves the cell • It is a flexible barrier made up of phospholipids • Phospholipids are amphipathic – They are both hydrophilic and hydrophobic • The hydrophobic tails bury themselves into the middle of the bilayer and the hydrophilic heads face the water on the inside and outside of the cell Transport through the membrane • There are two types of transport through the membrane • Passive – which requires no energy (ATP) • Active – which requires energy (ATP) Diffusion • Passive transport • Molecules move down a concentration gradient from high to low concentration MovieMovies from lecture June 2 Diffusion Demo • A starch and glucose solution is placed into a sac made from dialysis tubing. The sac is placed into pure water. • The sac is permeable to glucose, but not to starch • What do you expect to see in the water within 24 hours? Why? • How could we test for this? Demo Set-up OSMOSIS http://www.indiana.edu/~phys215/le cture/lecnotes/facdiff.html • The movement of water across the membrane from high concentration to low concentration. • Also passive transport • Hypertonic – The solute concentration is higher, meaning the water concentration is lower. • Hypotonic – Solute concentration is lower, meaning the water concentration is higher • Isotonic – Solute concentration is the same on both sides of the membrane Facilitated Diffusion • Movement through proteins in the membrane • Does not require energy (ATP) http://www.indiana.edu/~phys215/lecture/lecnotes/facdiff.html Active Transport • Movement of molecules against the concentration gradient • Requires ATP (energy) • Low High concentration http://w3.ouhsc.edu/human_physiology/Garrett.html How do we get the ATP to do these things? • Photosynthesis provides the sugars (fuel) for the power plant • Cellular Respiration breaks down the sugars to make ATP (energy) • Think of photosynthesis as the process that makes coal and Respiration as the power plant that burns the coal to make electrical energy for our homes Endocytosis and Exocytosis • Endocytosis – Cell envelops and engulfs large materials • Phagocytosis – solid materials • Pinocytosis – liquid materials • Exocytosis – Large particles leave the cell