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Organelles

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Title: Organelles


1
Organelles
For this and the following lecture, the
corresponding text in Goodman is pp 101-134
2
Relationships between organelles
3
The Nucleus
  • Nucleolus (arrow) site of rRNA transcription and
    processing and some aspects of ribosome assembly.
    The nucleolus is not membrane-bound, but is
    associated with regions of the chromosomes
    bearing genes for ribosomal RNAs.(arrows). These
    genes are present in multiple copies, and larger
    nucleoli are found in cells with high rates of
    protein synthesis.
  • Euchromatin regions where DNA is decondensed and
    genes are being actively transcribed. This DNA
    does not stain darkly in an electron micrograph.
  • Heterochromatin regions of highly condensed DNA
    not being transcribed. (arrowheads).

4
Nature of the double membrane surrounding the
nucleus.
Nuclear pores link interior with cytoplasm
5
The Inner Nuclear Membrane
  • The inner nuclear membrane has integral proteins
    that anchor the nuclear lamina, a network of
    protein fibers to which chromatin is attached.

6
Nuclear Lamina EM visualization of the network
just inside the inner nuclear membrane
7
Lamins of network
8
Isolated lamin B structure
  • P, phosphorylation sites that regulate
    disassembly in mitosis
  • Dimerization self-assembly of two proteins into
    functional unit
  • Membrane and nuclear targeting regions (NLS
    nuclear localization sequence this allows the
    protein to return to the nucleus after it has
    been synthesized in the cytoplasm).
  • Lamin B will attach to Lamin A

9
Nuclear Lamina Diseases
  • X-linked muscular dystrophy traced to mutations
    in a transmembrane protein still little
    understood, although the defective protein is
    identified. Different mutations in the same gene
    are causes for a lipodystrophy and a premature
    aging disease. The diverse effects and
    involvement of different tissues are as yet
    unexplained.

10
Freeze Fracture Nuclear Pores
11
Nuclear Pore Complexes
Each nuclear pore consists of eight subunits
surrounding a central aperture containing some
additional structures
12
Transport through nuclear pores is passive (small
molecules) or energy-dependent (large molecules)
13
Regulation of traffic through pores
  • More than 1 million molecules/min. pass through
    3000-5000 nuclear pores of the typical cell.
  • Outbound mRNA, tRNA, ribosomesproteins exported
    must bear a Nuclear Export Sequence)
  • Inbound Nuclear and ribosomal proteins (which
    must bear a Nuclear Localization Sequence that
    makes it cargo. This is recognized by an
    adapter Importin that binds it to an import
    receptor)

14
Nuclear business
  • To store the DNA. Chromatin is DNA that is
    attached to the nuclear lamina in a condensed
    form associated with proteins (histones).
  • To serve as the site for DNA transcription to RNA
    and processing of the RNA.
  • In the nucleolus, ribosomes are assembled from
    gt40 proteins and 3 RNA molecules.
  • Inbound traffic (through nuclear pores) includes
    proteins produced in the cytoplasm, including
    transcription factors and ribosomal proteins.
  • Outbound traffic (through nuclear pores) includes
    Messenger RNAs and ribosomal subunits.
  • All is cool until conditions inside and outside
    the cell trigger the chain of events leading to
    DNA replication and cell division..

15
The outer nuclear membrane is continuous with the
Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER)
16
ER Compartments
  • Rough ER is studded with ribosomes and is
    specialized to support protein synthesis and
    protein sorting.
  • Smooth ER is specialized for steroid synthesis,
    drug metabolism (the liver) or calcium storage
    (muscle).
  • Transitional ER is where vesicles are budding off
    to carry cargo to the Golgi Apparatus.

17
Differences in appearance of rough and smooth ER
18
Golgi Apparatus
  • Stacked membrane compartments that are polarized
    in cis) and out (trans). Illustration includes
    coated pre-Golgi intermediates and transitional
    elements.

19
Golgi Functions
  • Protein processing
  • Lipid synthesis
  • Distribution of proteins and lipids vesicles

20
Lysosomes a specialized offspring of the Golgi
Apparatus that form when vesicles containing
lysosomal proteins fuse with endosomes that
result from endocytosis.
21
Lysosomes are the dark bodies (arrows)
22
Lysosomal function hydrolysis of material taken
up by endocytosis or phagocytosis and also to
recycle worn-out cell debris taken into endosomes
by a process called autophagy. The lysosomes are
acidified by a vacuolar-type H ATPase.
23
Lysosomal Storage Diseases
  • If a genetic defect leads to malfunction in one
    of the enzymes used by lysosomes to break down a
    particular class of substances, that substance
    will accumulate, i.e., be stored, in the
    lysosome. This accumulation leads to
    malfunction. In response, the cell produces more
    lysosomes and these also become clogged, and
    eventually the cell itself becomes dysfunctional.
    The tissues that produce the most of the
    unhydrolyzed material will be most affected.

24
Gauchers Disease, the most common lysosomal
storage disease
The primary lesion of the disease is seen in
macrophages that ingest damaged leucocytes and
erythrocytes and then cannot digest their
membrane lipid. Ultimately this results in
symptoms that involve almost every organ system.
It is most common in people of Ashkenazi Jewish
lineage. Gauchers disease can be treated by IV
infusion of the missing enzyme. Unfortunately,
such treatments are quite expensive.
25
Other Lysosomal Storage Diseases
26
Peroxisomes
  • Peroxisomes are membrane-bound organelles formed
    on the ER which then mature through accumulation
    of additional proteins (tailored to the needs of
    the cell) that are targeted to them from the
    cytoplasm.
  • Fatty acid oxidation and other oxidative
    reactions, including breaking down uric acid,
    amino acids, purines and methanol occur in the
    controlled environment of the peroxisomes.
  • Oxidative reactions that lead to the production
    of H2O2 occur in peroxisomes, but the potential
    toxicity of peroxide is managed by the presence
    of catalase, an antioxidant that decomposes H2O2
    and to water and O2 or uses the extra oxygen to
    oxidize another compound.

27
Mitochondria
  • Organelle believed to be derived from free-living
    bacterial-type ancestor.

28
More obvious components of mitochondrial structure
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