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EDUCATION “Education is a progressive discovery of our own ignorance.” -Will Durant The Amazing Cell Chapter 3 Anatomy and Physiology Cells • Basic unit of _______________. • Not to be confused with atoms-the basic units of all matter • Can exist alone as a single, free-living plant or animal, or can combine to form elaborate and complex organisms. • We must understand the cell before we can understand the anatomy and physiology of the tissues and systems the cell makes up Evolution of Cells • ______________- “before nucleus”, cells without nucleus were thought to have developed first. • DNA is not in a separate compartment • _______________- “true nucleus”, developed later and are found in all multicellular organisms. • Has distinct nucleus surrounded by protective ____________________. Size Limitations • Size of most cells is restricted to 10-30 µm in diameter • Why is the small size so important: 1) 2) 3) Mammalian Cell Anatomy • Essential structures: • ___________________(also known as plasma membrane). • Separates cell from environment. • ___________________ • Everything inside the cell membrane but outside the nucleus. • ___________________ • Contains the genetic material of the cell. Other organelles in a cell • • • • • • • Cilia Mitochondria Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER) Ribosomes Golgi apparatus Lysosome Peroxisomes Cell Membrane • Flexible, elastic barrier between inner cytoplasm and outer environment. • Governs the movement of atoms and molecules in and out of the cell. • Consists primarily of protein, phospholipids, cholesterol, lipids, and carbohydrates. Structure of the Cell Membrane • ____________________: composed of two layers of phospholipid molecules • ________________ “heads”are on outside • ________________“tails” are on the inside • Most lipid soluble molecules easily pass through membrane • Water-soluble molecules do not readily pass through Structure of the Cell Membrane • Structural and Functional proteins are embedded in the membrane. • Proteins that occur within the bi-layer are called __________________________. • These proteins may span the entire width of the membrane and create channels through which other molecules can pass. Integral Proteins • Channels they create may be: • ____________________ • permit only certain molecules in or out of the cell • _______________ • allow the passage of molecules freely Peripheral Proteins • Functional protein which can be bound to the inside or outside surfaces of the cell membrane. • Sometimes act as enzymes • May be involved in changing the cell’s shape. Cell Membrane: External Surface • _________________– coating on the cell surface of some cells made of glycoprotein and glycolipids. • Unique to each cell – provides markers for recognition and for interactions. • Composed of 2 groups of molecules: • _____________________________ • Sticky glycoproteins that cover cell surface. Help cells move past one another and signaling. • Signal circulating cells like WBCs to areas of inflammation or infection • ____________________________ • Integral proteins and glycoproteins that act as binding sites on the cell surface. • Involved with signaling as well. Flagella and Cilia • Extensions of the plasma membrane • ______________- occur in large numbers on the exposed surface of some cells. • Shorter than flagella and move synchronously to create waves of motion for propulsion. • Functions: to move fluid and other substances past the cell surface • In upper respiratory tract, propel bacteria and mucus from the lungs • In oviduct, pulls egg from ovary into oviduct. Flagella and Cilia • _______________- significantly longer than cilia and usually occur singularly. • Function: aid in the movement of a cell through fluid. • Tail of sperm is a flagellum Cytoplasm • The inner substance of the cell, excluding the nucleus. • Components include: • Cytosol • Cytoskeleton • Organelles • Inclusions Cytosol • The fluid of the cell • Viscous, semi-transparent liquid composed of dissolved electrolytes, amino acids, and simple sugars. • Proteins suspended within fluid give fluid its thick, jellylike consistency. • Theses proteins are enzymes that are important in metabolic activities of the cell. Cytoskeleton • Framework for the cells • Gives support and shape to the cell, enables cell to move and provides direction for metabolic activity. • anchors organelles. • 3 types of fibers that comprise cytoskeleton: • Microtubules • Intermediate fibers • Microfilaments. Cytoskeleton • _______________ • Thickest fibers and are long and hollow • Form cables that organelles attach to to move throughout the cell. Cytoskeleton • _____________________ • Woven, ropelike fibers that are able to resist pulling forces on the cell • Toughest and most permanent part of the cytoskeleton. Cytoskeleton • ________________________ • Composed of actin and myosin • Play key role in cell’s ability to change shape & break apart during cell division Organelles • “little organs” • Membrane bound structures within cytoplasm that have specialized functions. Organelles • Include: • Mitochondria • Ribosomes • Golgi Apparatus • Endoplasmic Reticulum • Lysosomes • Peroxisomes Mitochondria • One of largest organelles • Called “powerhouse of the cell” because ______________________________________ ______________________________ • Nutrient molecules (i.e. glucose) are broken down to produce intracellular fuel in the form of ATP. This process is called cellular respiration. Mitochondria continued. • Active cells have higher energy demands so have more mitochondria. • Example: • Mitochondria can divide through fission-or the pinching itself in half. Mitochondrial shape • Tend to be elliptical and round with outer smooth membrane and inner involuted membrane. • Inner membrane forms ____________ which increase internal working area and matrix (enzyme-rich liquid housed in mitochondria). • Cristae are site of ATP production Ribosomes • Most common organelle in the cell. • Made of two subunits composed of protein and rRNA. • Site of _____________ synthesis. • May be attached to the endoplasmic reticulum (rough ER) or free in the cytoplasm Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER) • Series of flattened tubes stacked on one another and bent into crescent shape. • May be __________ or ___________depending on the presence of ribosomes. • Rough ER is involved in production of protein. • Smooth ER is connected to Rough ER and is active in synthesis and storage of lipids. Golgi Apparatus • Found near nucleus and is similar in structure to ER • Receives and modifies proteins produced by ER. • Once completed they are packaged in vesicles and travel out into the cell. Lysosomes • Specialized vesicle formed by Golgi apparatus. • Contains hydrolytic enzymes which engulf bacteria or cell nutrients and digests them. • Principal responsibility is:______________________________________ _________________________ • Considered “stomach of the cell”. • When cells die, lysosomes are released and digest other portions of the cell, this is called autolysis. Peroxisomes • Membranous sacs containing enzymes found throughout the cell. • Important in detoxification of various molecules. • Remove _________________normal products of cellular metabolism but can be harmful in large numbers • Carry two major enzymes: • _______________________-assist in conversion in free radicals to hydrogen peroxide. • ______________________-reduce hydrogen peroxide to water. Inclusions • Packaged units of metabolic products or substances that the cell has engulfed. • May or may not be membrane-bound. • ______________ are larger than vesicles but are of similar structure. These structures act as storage units, holding substances within the cell until its contents can be used. Centrioles • Found in pairs perpendicular to one another. • Visible during cell division near nuclear envelope • Help to organize ____________________during cell division. • May also form bases of cilia and flagella (known as basal bodies). Nucleus • Largest organelle in the cell. • Control center or “brain” of the cell. • Primary functions are to maintain hereditary information of the species and to control cellular activities through protein synthesis. • Some cells may have one nucleus, some may be multi-nucleated while others are anucleated. Nuclear Anatomy • Divided into four parts: • Nuclear Envelope or membrane • Nucleoplasm • Chromatin • Nucleoli Nuclear Envelope and Nucleoplasm • Separated from cytosol by a nuclear envelope composed of two lipid bilayers • Contains nuclear poreschannel through entire thickness. • Allow transport of protein and RNA. Nucleoplasm • The gel-like substance that fills the nucleus. • Resembles cytosol. DNA, RNA and Chromatin • DNA and RNA are composed of nucleotides. • What are the 5 nucleotides? • How do they pair? • Chromatin-fibers made up of DNA and globular proteins called histones • During cell division the chromatin condenses into super-coiled x-shaped structures called __________________ Nucleoli • Not membrane bound • Where ribosomal subunits are made • Contain DNA that governs synthesis of rRNA. Cell Physiology • The Cellular Environment • Body Fluids • Composed primarily of water • _________________fluid found inside cell. • ___________________fluid outside cell. • ___________________fluid contained in the tissues between the cells. Ions, Electrolytes, and pH • What are ions? • Cations • Anions • Electrolytes • In sick or injured animals, electrolyte concentrations and pH of intracellular and extracellular fluid can become abnormally high or low Membrane Processes • In order to maintain homeostasis cell must select what it needs from extracellular fluid and bring it into intracellular environment. • Must excrete waste products or transport resources needed in other parts of the body to the extracellular compartment. • Processes may be _______________ (do not require ATP) OR _______________(do use ATP). Passive Transport Processes • Remember: No Energy Required! • 4 Passive Processes: • Diffusion • Facilitated Diffusion • Osmosis • Filtration Diffusion • movement of molecules from _________ concentration to _____________concentration • driven by a ______________________the difference between the concentration of one area and the concentration of another. • Will continue until the molecule is evenly dispersed throughout the solution • Determining factors for Diffusion through a membrane: 1. _________________– small can move through 2. _________________– lipids can pass lipid bilayer 3. _________________– ions move through special channel proteins 4. _________________– faster in hot solution Diffusion Facilitated Diffusion • Selective carrier proteins assist in movement of molecules from higher to lower concentration; speed of diffusion is limited by saturation of carrier molecules. • http://www.wisconline.com/objects/ViewObject.aspx?ID=A P11103 Osmosis • Passive movement of __________ through a semi-permeable membrane from high concentration to low concentration. • Similar to diffusion, but here, we are referring to the movement of water molecules rather than solute Filtration • ___________________(caused by the beating heart) forces liquid and small molecules through a membrane. • Liquids pushed through a membrane when the pressure on one side is greater than that on the other side. • Example? • http://www.wisconline.com/objects/ViewObject.aspx?ID=A P11103 Tonicity Terminology • ________________ : Extracellular fluid has same concentration of dissolved substances as intracellular fluid • ___________________: Cytoplasm (inside) of cell is more concentrated than extracellular (outside) fluid • __________________: Extracellular fluid is more concentrated than cytoplasm Active Transport Processes • Remember: Requires Energy (ATP)! • Relies on a carrier protein with a specific binding site for ATP • Does not require a concentration gradient • __________________– substances are moving in the same direction • ___________________ – substances are moved in opposite directions • Include: • Active Transport • Endocytosis • Phagocytosis • Pinocytosis • Receptor mediated • Exocytosis Active Transport • Active movement of molecules by specific carrier protein; molecules may move against concentration gradient. Endocytosis • ____________________ • Cells engulf solid substances • _____________________ • Cells engulf liquid substances • ________________________ • Specialized protein receptors bind to ligands. • Ligand-small molecules that bind to receptors or larger molecules. Exocytosis • Excretion of waste products and secretion of manufactured substances. • Packaged in secretory vesicles which fuse with cell membrane and are ejected to extracellular space. Life Cycle of the Cell • Two types of division of cells. • ________________- Reduction division • Found in reproductive cells. End up with half of what we start with. • ______________- exact replication of cell. • We will focus mainly on Mitosis for this chapter. Mitosis • Life cycle has been divided into two major periods: • _______________ • When cell is growing, maturing, and differentiating. • Cells spend majority of time in this phase. • ________________ • When cell is actively dividing. • Composed of 5 stages: • _________________ • _________________ • _________________ • _________________ Interphase • Period between cell divisions. • Nucleus and nucleoli are visible and chromatin is arranged loosely throughout the nucleus. • Divided into three subphases: • Growth 1 (G1)- metabolic activity and cell growth; time variable (min-yrs) depending on cell type • Synthetic (S)- DNA replication • Growth 2 (G2)- very brief; synthesis of enzymes and proteins needed for mitosis DNA Replication • Many cells are continually replicating to maintain body tissues, to heal wounds, or to enable growth • DNA must be replicated before the cell can divide – a copy of DNA is made to be passed to the daughter cell • Occurs during Interphase Mitotic Phase- Cell Division • Prophase • Chromatin coils and are composed of two identical chromatids • Spindle apparatus appears • Normal synthetic processes cease. • Nuclear envelope disintegrates • Metaphase • Chromosomes are lined up in center of spindle. • Centromere of each chromosome is attached to a spindle fiber. • Anaphase • Centromeres split apart and each chromatid becomes its own chromosome. • Spindle fiber separates, and chromosomes are pulled away from each other. • Cytoplasm constricts along metaphase plate. • Telophase • Final stage of mitosis • When chromosomal movement stops • Chromosomes reach poles and begin to unravel. • New nuclear envelope appears as well nucleoli. • Cytokinesis ends telophase. • New daughter cells enter interphase. Control of Cell Division • Some cells divide rapidly others not so fast. • Examples of each • Normal cells stop dividing when they come into contact with surrounding cells. • Called Contact inhibition • Division can be controlled once numbers reach a certain point. • Proteins can also allow cells to enter mitotic phase Protein Synthesis • Protein synthesis is essential for life. • Begins in nucleus • DNA information is first transcribed • Transcription-Genetic information in DNA is copied onto messenger RNA (mRNA) • Codon- series of 3 RNA nucleotides. • mRNA sends information to cytoplasm • Translation- Ribosomes (rRNA) bind to mRNA strand. • New protein building as codes are translated from nucleotides to amino acids by tRNA Genetic Mutations • A genetic error. • Mutations may be so severe that cell dies, but may also cause no issues whatsoever. • Some can be repaired by repair enzymes. • May occur spontaneously or due to mutagens. • Viruses • Ionizing radiation • Certain chemicals • What is cancer? • What is chemotherapy? Cell Differentiation and Development • Differentiation- The progressive acquisition of individual characteristics by cells to enable them to perform different functions. • Differentiation is important as it keeps cells focused on a particular function. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dA5Rfo GiupM • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y8gZCTj AbVs&feature=related