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Chapter 3 Lecture Slides Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Functions • Basic unit of life • Synthesis of molecules • Communication • Cell metabolism and energy release • Reproduction and inheritance (DNA) 2 Cell Structure • Organelles: - specialized structures in cells that perform specific functions - Ex. Nucleus, mitochondria, ribosomes, etc. • Cytoplasm: jelly-like substance that holds organelles 3 Cell Membrane • What is it? outermost component of a cell • Functions: - selective barrier - encloses cytoplasm • Extracellular: material outside cell • Intracellular: material inside cell 4 Structure of Cell Membrane • Called Fluid Mosaic Model • Made of phospholipids and proteins • Phospholipids form a double layer or bilayer • Phospholipids contain 2 regions: polar and nonpolar 5 • Polar regions: - “heads” - hydrophilic (H2O loving) - exposed to H2O • Nonpolar regions: - “tails” - hydrophobic (H2O fearing) - away from H2O 6 Figure 2.14b 7 Figure 3.2a Movement through Cell Membrane • Cell membrane selectively determines what can pass in and out of the cell. • Enzymes, glycogen, and potassium are found in higher concentrations INSIDE the cell. • Sodium, calcium, and chloride are found in higher concentrations OUTSIDE the cell. 9 Ways molecules Pass through Cell Membrane 1. Directly through (diffusion): O2 and CO2 (small molecules) 2. Membrane channels: - proteins that extend from one side of cell membrane to other - size, shape, and charge (+/-) determine what can go through - Ex. Na+ passes through Na+ channels 10 3. Carrier molecules: - bind to molecules, transport them across, and drop them off - Ex. glucose 4. Vesicles: - can transport a variety of materials - fuse with cell membrane 12 Figure 3.7 Diffusion • What is it? movement of molecules from areas of high to low concentration • Solution: solid, liquid, or gas that contains one or more solutes • Solute: substance added to solvent that dissolves • Solvent: substance such as H2O that solute is being added to Ex. Add salt to H2O. H2O =solvent, salt=solute, mixture=solution 15 16 • Concentration gradient: - measures conc. difference at 2 points - greater the distance the faster the solute will travel • Filtration: movement of fluid through a partition with holes 18 Mediated Transport Mechanisms • Facilitated diffusion: - diffusion with aid of a carrier molecule - requires no ATP • Active transport: - moves substances from low to high conc. - requires ATP - Ex. Sodium-potassium pump 19 Osmosis • What is it? diffusion of water across a cell membrane • Osmotic pressure: force required to prevent movement of water across cell membrane 22 Types of Osmotic Solutions • Hypotonic solution: - lower conc. of solutes outside cell - higher conc. of H2O outside cell - H2O moves into cell - lysis (burst) • Hypertonic solution: - higher conc. of solutes outside cell - higher conc. H2O inside cell - H2O moves out - crenation (shrinks) 24 • Isotonic solution: - equal conc. of solutes - water doesn’t move - cell remains intact 25 Endocytosis • What is it? process that brings materials into cell using vesicles • 2 types - Phagocytosis: cell eating (solid particles) - Pinocytosis: cell drinking (liquid particles) 27 28 Exocytosis • What is it? process that carries materials out of cell using vesicles 29 31 Cell Structures • Cytoplasm Location: inside cell Characteristic: jelly-like fluid Function: give cell shape and hold organelles in place • Nucleus Location: center of cell Characteristic: all cells contain nucleus at some point 33 Function: houses DNA • Nuclear envelope: Location: edge of nucleus • Nuclear pores: Location: surface of nucleus Function: where materials pass in and out of nucleus 35 Figure 3.12a • Chromosome: Location: inside nucleus Characteristic: made of DNA and proteins Function: part of genetic makeup • Chromatin: Location: inside nucleus Characteristic: loosely coiled chromosomes 37 • Nucleolus Location: in nucleus Function: produce ribosomes • Ribosome Location: attached to RER or cytoplasm Function: produce proteins 39 • RER (Rough Endoplasmic Reticulum) Location: cytoplasm Characteristic: membranes with ribosomes attached Function: site of protein synthesis • SER (Smooth Endoplasmic Reticulum) Location: cytoplasm Characteristic: membranes with no ribosomes Function: site of lipid synthesis (Ex. Cholesterol) 40 Figure 3.15a • Golgi apparatus Location: cytoplasm Characteristic: closely, packed stacks of membranes Function: collect, sort, package, and distribute proteins and lipids • Secretory vesicle Location: cytoplasm Function: distributes materials out of cell 42 • Lysosome Location: cytoplasm Function: enzymes that digest foreign material • Mitochondria Location: cytoplasm Characteristic: contains folds (cristae) Function: produces ATP 44 • Cilia Location: cell surface Characteristic: many per cell Function: move materials across cell’s surface • Flagella Location: cell surface Characteristic: 1 per cell Function: move cell, Ex. sperm 47 • Microvilli Location: cell surface Characteristic: shorter than cilia Function: increase surface area 48 Cytoskeleton • What is it? - cell’s framework - made of proteins • Functions: - provide support - hold organelles in place - enable cell to change shape 49 Types of Cytoskeleton • Microtubules: - largest diameter - provide structural support - form cilia and flagella • Intermediate filaments: - medium diameter - maintain cell shape • Microfilaments: - smallest diameter - involved in cell movement 50 Whole Cell Activity • A cell’s characteristics are determine by the type of proteins produced • Proteins’ function is determined by genetics • Information in DNA provides the cell with a code for its cellular processes 52 DNA • What is it? - double helix in nucleus - composed of nucleotides - contains 5 carbon sugar (deoxyribose, nitrogen base, phosphate 53 Flow of Genetic Information • Also called Central Dogma • Occurs in three stages: – DNA replication – Transcription – Translation DNA Replication Gene Expression • What is it? - information in DNA directs protein synthesis - proteins provide code for gene expression - enzymes regulate chemical reactions - uses transcription and translation 57 Transcription • What is it? - process by which DNA is “read” - occurs in ribosomes - produces mRNA (messenger RNA) - mRNA contains codons - codons: set of 3 nucleotide bases that code for a particular amino acid 59 Translation • What is it? - process by mRNA is converted into amino acids (polypeptides) - produces proteins - codons pair with anticodons - anticodons: 3 nucleotide bases carried by tRNA 61 Cell Division • What is it? - formation of 2 daughter cells from a single parent cell - uses mitosis and meiosis - each cell (except sperm and egg) contains 46 chromosomes (diploid) - sperm and egg contain 23 chromosomes 63 Mitosis • What is it? - cell division that occurs in all cells except sex cells - forms 2 daughter cells 64 Components of Mitosis • Chromatid: 2 strands of chromosomes that are genetically identical • Centromere: where 2 chromatids are connected • Centrioles: small organelle composed of 9 triplets 65 Stages in Mitosis 1. Interphase: - time between cell divisions - DNA is in strands (chromatin) - DNA replication occurs 2. Prophase: - chromatin condenses into chromosomes - centrioles move to opposite ends 67 3. Metaphase: chromosomes align 4. Anaphase: - chromatids separate to form 2 sets of chromosomes - chromosomes move towards centrioles 5. Telophase: - chromosomes disperse - nuclear envelopes and nucleoli form - cytoplasm divides to form 2 cells 68