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CELLS

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CELLS. CHAPTER 3. Introduction. Cells are the basic structural and functional unit ... Study of cells: cytology. Cell theory: All organisms made of cells ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CELLS


1
CELLS
  • CHAPTER 3

2
Introduction
  • Cells are the basic structural and functional
    unit of all living organisms.
  • Study of cells cytology
  • Cell theory
  • All organisms made of cells
  • Cell is the basic unit of life
  • New cells arise from preexisting cells

3
Parts of a cell
  • The principal parts of a cell are
  • 1. Plasma membrane the outer boundary
  • 2. Cytosol the fluid material in the interior.
    Contains mostly water, ions, sugar,amino acids,
    lipids, ATP, wastes. Site for chemical
    reactions.
  • 3. Organelles structures found within that
    perform a specific function. Some organelles are
    membranous and others are non membranous.
  • 4. Nucleus the largest organelle that controls
    all cellular functions.

4
Cellular Organelles
  • Cytoskeleton a network of protein filaments.
    Microfilaments, intermediate filaments,
    microtubules. Provides structural framework and
    responsible for cell movements.
  • Centrosome consists of centrioles. Responsible
    for cell division process mitosis and meiosis.
  • Cilia and flagella hair-like projections. Move
    fluid along cell surface or entire cell.
  • Ribosomes made of RNA and protein. Small and
    large subunits. Sites for protein synthesis.

5
Cellular Organelles
  • Endoplasmic reticulum (ER) network of membranes
    that form sacs or tubules called cisterns. Rough
    ER covered by ribosomes and function is protein
    synthesis. Also forms glycoproteins. Smooth ER
    lacks ribosomes. Synthesizes steroids, fats
    phospholipids. Inactivates or detoxifies harmful
    drugs.
  • Golgi Complex contains flattened sacs. It
    receives synthesized products from ER and then
    sorts, modifies, packages and transports or
    secretes them to various destinations.

6
Cellular Organelles
  • Lysosomes membrane bound organelles that contain
    digestive enzymes. Function in digestion of
    worn-out organelles, digestion of foreign
    invaders, and extra cellular digestion.
  • Peroxisomes similar to lysosomes but smaller.
    Contain catalase that degrades hydrogen peroxide.
  • Mitochondria double-membrane structures. Inner
    membrane has folds called cristae and a
    fluid-filled cavity called the matrix. It is
    the powerhouse of the cell as most of the ATP is
    generated here by cellular respiration.

7
Nucleus
  • Largest organelle of the cell.
  • Consists of a double nuclear envelope.
  • Nuclear pores allow for the exchange of material
    between the nucleus and cytoplasm.
  • Fluid of nucleus nucleoplasm.
  • Chromatin genetic material. Made of DNA and
    protein. Chromosomes.
  • Nucleolus pre-assembly site for ribosomes.
  • Genes (found on chromosomes) control cellular
    structure and most cellular functions.

8
Plasma Membrane
  • Surrounds and contains of the cytoplasm of the
    cell.
  • It contains a 5050 mix of protein and lipids.
  • The fluid-mosaic model the membrane is a mosaic
    of proteins floating like icebergs in a sea of
    lipid bilayer.
  • The major lipid is phospholipid (bilayer), also
    present is cholesterol and glycolipids.
  • Proteins integral or peripheral. Also
    glycoproteins.

9
Plasma membrane
  • Membrane proteins serve various functions.
    Channels or transporters help specific solutes
    to enter. Receptors recognize specific
    molecules. Other proteins function as enzymes or
    cell-identity markers.
  • Membrane is selectively permeable. The lipid
    bilayer permits water, gases, nonpolar
    substances. Proteins allow for ions and charged
    molecules to pass through.
  • Membrane is a fluid structure. Fluidity
    increased by unsaturated fatty acids. The
    bilayer can self-seal when torn or punctured.

10
Transport processes
  • Passive and Active mechanisms. In passive
    transport molecules move down the concentration
    gradient. In active transport molecules move
    uphill against concentration gradient.
  • In vesicular transport, tiny vesicles either
    detach from or merge with the plasma membrane to
    move materials across the membrane.

11
Passive transport
  • In net diffusion molecules move from a high
    concentration area to a low concentration area
    until an equilibrium is reached. The rate of
    diffusion depends on steepness of concentration
    gradient, temperature, size or mass of diffusing
    substance. Eg. Oxygen, carbon dioxide, alcohols,
    steroids, fat soluble vitamins.
  • Ion channels allow diffusion across the membrane
    of small inorganic ions of sodium, potassium,
    calcium, chloride.
  • In facilitated diffusion, a solute such as
    glucose binds to a specific transporter protein
    and is carried inside or outside the cell. Eg.
    Glucose, amino acids.

12
Osmosis
  • Net movement of water across a selectively
    permeable membrane from an area of high water
    concentration to an area of low water
    concentration.
  • Isotonic solution
  • Hypotonic solution
  • Hypertonic solution

13
Active Transport
  • Movement of molecules from a low concentration
    area to a high concentration area with the
    expenditure of ATP energy. Also requires a
    transport protein. Eg. Sodium, potassium,
    hydrogen, chloride, iodide, calcium ions.
  • The most prevalent primary active pump is the
    Na/K pump.
  • Secondary active transport symporters and
    antiporters.

14
Vesicular transport
  • Endocytosis phagocytosis and pinocytosis.
    Phagocytosis is the ingestion of solid particles.
    Pinocytosis is the ingestion of extracellular
    fluid.
  • Receptor-mediated endocytosis is the selective
    uptake of large particles and molecules called
    ligands.
  • Exocytosis involves movement of secretory or
    waste products out of a cell by fusion of
    vesicles with the plasma membrane.

15
Cell Division
  • Cell division is the process by which cells
    reproduce themselves. It consists of nuclear
    division(mitosis) and cytoplasmic division
    (cytokinesis).
  • Cell division that results in an increase in the
    number of cells involves mitosis.
  • Cell division that involves production of sperm
    or ova involves meiosis.

16
Cell cycle
  • It is divided into interphase, mitosis and
    cytokinesis.
  • Interphase is further divided into G1, S and G2
    phases.
  • G1 phase cell duplicates its organelles and
    cytosolic contents.
  • S phase during this phase DNA replication
    occurs.
  • G2 phase enzymes and other proteins are
    syntyhesized.

17
Mitosis
  • Mitosis is divided into prophase, metaphase,
    anaphase and telophase.
  • Prophase nuclear envelope disintegrates,
    nucleolus disappears, centrioles start moving to
    opposite poles, spindle apparatus is formed,
    chromosomes are visible.
  • Metaphase chromosomes are aligned along the
    equator of the cell.
  • Anaphase the chromatids are pulled apart to
    opposite poles.

18
Mitosis and Cytokinesis
  • Telophase reappearance of nuclear envelope,
    chromatin, nucleolus. Cleavage furrow.
  • Cytokinesis cytoplasmic division to form two
    identical daughter cells.
  • Certain genes regulate both cell division and
    apoptosis (programmed cell death).

19
Cancer
  • Uncontrolled cell division.
  • Tumor or neoplasm excess tissue in a part of the
    body.
  • Cancerous tumor is malignant tumor.
  • Metastasis ability to spread to other parts.
  • Benign tumor noncancerous tumor.
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