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A new organelle: Magnetosomes • Why? This may simplify aquatic searches for the correct depth by keeping the cell in the same direction… like a sea anchor • Organelles that contain magnetic iron particles • They are aligned in a linear array and with partial membranes • Magnetosomes help cells to keep their orientation to the magnetic field of the earth Wednesday, January 11th, 2017 Class 7 Learning Goals The Endomembrane System and Cell Movement • After this class, you should be able to: – Trace the path of transport and development for a protein or lipid moving through the endomembrane system. – Explain the dynamic nature of cytoskeletal elements – Analyze and identify errors in a description of cellular movement Organelle Cellular Role Nucleus (Covered in great depth in 355) Lysosome Peroxisome Vacuole Mitochondria (Covered in depth in Week 5) Chloroplast (Covered in great depth in 220) Rough ER Smooth ER Golgi Apparatus Ribosomes (Covered in depth next week) Cytoskeleton Plasma membrane (Covered in depth yesterday) Specialized components Microenvironment Clicker Question #9 The nucleus is the organelle in which DNA is stored and used. Which is most likely about the chemical microenvironment of the nucleus in most cells? The nuclear microenvironment: 1. Contains all of the proteins in a cell because the protein-building instructions are located therein 2. Has a diversity of mutation-causing chemicals 3. Allows import of DNA 4. Is relatively protective against mutation-causing rays and chemicals Problem: Some proteins need to be in the plasma membrane Some proteins need to be sent outside the cell …but proteins are far too big to go through even one side of the plasma membrane… The EndoMembrane System: The protein & lipid factory • Comprised of – the rough ER, – the smooth ER, and – the Golgi apparatus, • The EMS is the primary system for protein and lipid synthesis. This system allows production, processing and transport of specific and diverse molecules. Nucleus EMS Organelles: The Rough ER A Protein Synthesis and Processing Complex • • • • The rough ER is contiguous with the nuclear membrane New proteins are directly inserted into the ER Microenvironment: noncytoplasmic molecular Lumen of conditions for protein folding rough ER After processing, proteins are transported to other destinations Ribosomes on outside by controlled vesicle budding Free ribosomes in cytoplasm Clicker Question #4 Many functional proteins are translated in the cytoplasm with no need for the Endomembrane System. What is a good reason to use the EMS? 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. To make proteins that are delivered to a specific organelle To make proteins that are delivered to the plasma membrane To make proteins that fold differently than they would if they were translated in the cytoplasm To make proteins with lipid modifications All of these are good reasons to use the EMS for translation EMS Organelles: Smooth ER A Lipid-Handling Center and Storage Site • The smooth ER is the major processing zone for lipids • Smooth ER lacks ribosomes, naturally • ER hosts non-cytoplasmic molecular conditions and specialized enzymes • After processing, lipids are transported to other destinations by controlled vesicle budding Smooth endoplasmic reticulum Lumen of smooth ER EMS Organelles: The Golgi Apparatus A Site of Protein Processing The cis face is oriented towards the rough ER • • • • A site for carbohydrate modification of proteins Packaging and transport to cellular locations with vesicles Formed by a series of stacked flat membranous sacs called cisternae. Receives products from the rough ER and sends finished products to the cell surface in vesicles. The trans face is oriented away from the rough ER Golgi apparatus cis face Vesicle Lumen Cisternae Vesicles trans face Golgi Video Clicker Question #5 What is a reasonably hypothesis about the microenvironment of the Smooth Endoplasmic Reticulum? 1. It is more hydrophobic than the rest of the cell 2. It would be worse for protection of nucleic acids than the microenvironment in the nucleus 3. It is good for breaking down protein 4. It is the same as the cytoplasm. Organelles: The Cytoskeleton • The cytoskeleton is a complex network of fibers that helps maintain cell shape by providing structural support. • The cytoskeleton is dynamic; it changes to alter the cell’s shape, to transport materials in the cell, or to move the cell itself. • The three types of cytoskeletal elements are – actin filaments, – intermediate filaments, and – microtubules. Raven & Singer, 7th Edition Organelles: Cytoskeletal building Peer Instruction • The smallest cytoskeletal elements are actin filaments, also known as microfilaments. • Actin filaments form by polymerization of individual actin molecules. the ‘-’ end the ‘+’ end ‘actin polymerase’ ‘actin depolymerase’ • How does this filament move to the right? You have: Peer Instruction a cytoskeletal filament a motor protein a vesicle a plasma membrane around the cell Draw the answers: How does your cell move part of the plasma membrane? How does your cell move a vesicle towards an organelle? Video: Cell crawling 1. ‘Crawling’ time 1 time 2 nucleus Peer Instruction time 3 nucleus 2. ‘Chasing’ nucleus nucleus target 3. ‘Contraction’ nucleus nucleus Clicker Question #1 Which would be a problem for a single-celled organism if all depolymerases were inactivated? 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. All cell movement would be stopped Cells could extend towards a goal, but rarely reach it Cells would run out of actin monomers Cells could not sense target molecules Cells would not be able to undergo meiosis No new actin polymers would be formed Clicker Question #2 nucleus This cell is changing direction to move towards a green ‘prey’ cell. Which answer is FALSE? 1) The cell has membrane proteins. 2) The ‘prey’ is losing molecules into the environment. 3) Actin is polymerizing. 4) The cell is anticipating the destination of the ‘prey’. Clicker Question #3 time 1 time 3 nucleus nucleus Which answer is true about the location marked: 1) 2) 3) 4) There are no actin polymerase enzymes here. There are active actin polymerase enzymes here. There are inactive polymerase enzymes here. Actin polymerases found here may be allosterically regulated. ? Clicker Question #3 Which would be a problem for a single-celled organism if all depolymerases were inactivated? 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. All cell movement would be stopped Cells could extend towards a goal, but rarely reach it Cells would run out of actin monomers Cells could not sense target molecules Cells would not be able to undergo meiosis No new actin polymers would be formed Key Concepts • • • • • • • Why do you expect amino acid side chains on the outside of an integral membrane protein (but within the bilayer) to be hydrophobic? Explain the matches between three possible transport situations… – facilitated diffusion, active transport, and passive diffusion …and three cellular situations – a need for extreme rapid transport, intake of a common large molecule, letting a rare waste molecule out of the cell What specialized enzymes would you expect in a mitochondrion? In the Rough ER? What microenvironment is unique to the nucleus? To the peroxisome? Imagine: – 1) a lipid destined to become part of the plasma membrane, and – 2) a protein that will be released outside of the cell. • Describe the differences in the pathways taken by each molecule. Where or when does each pathway utilize the joining of lipid membranes? What would happen to a crawling cell that instantly lost all actin polymerization enzymes? Be as specific as possible. Where is energy used in the movement of a single cell? Bonus question: Where does the energy come from to move Golgi vacuoles to different parts of the cell? There are two very different answers…