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Cells!

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Title: Cells!


1
Cells!
  • Muse 2430 Lecture 2
  • 5/8/13

2
Chapter 3Cells
  • vary in size
  • possess distinctive shapes
  • measured in micrometers

3
An Introduction to Cells
  • Sex cells (germ cells)
  • Reproductive cells
  • Male sperm
  • Female oocyte (a cell that develops into an egg)
  • Somatic cells (soma body)
  • All body cells except sex cells

4
Cell Membrane
5
The Plasma Membrane
6
Cell Membrane
  • The proteins are divided into two categories
    integral and peripheral.
  • The integral proteins form the majority of
    membrane proteins. They penetrate and are
    embedded in the bilayer, bound to the nonpolar
    tail regions.
  • The transmembrane proteins span the bilayer
    completely and may form channels (pores) for
    transport of substances across the membrane.
  • Integral proteins also may lie partly submerged
    in one side or the other. They have several
    functions.
  • Some integral proteins serve as cell surface
    enzymes.
  • Integral proteins bound to carbohydrates may form
    receptor sites for chemical messages from other
    cells, such as endocrine glands.
  • Some also function as markers, or antigens, which
    identify cell types.
  • The peripheral proteins are loosely bound to the
    membrane surface and can be easily removed from
    it. Their functions are not as well known as
    those of integral proteins. They may be involved
    in structural support and changes in membrane
    shape during cell division or cell movement.

7
Structure of the Plasma Membrane
8
Intercellular Junctions
  • Tight junctions
  • close space between cells
  • located among cells that form linings
  • Desmosomes
  • form spot welds between cells
  • located among outer skin cells
  • Gap junctions
  • tubular channels between cells
  • located in cardiac muscle cells

9
The cytoplasm contains a complex network of
structural components
  • Microfilaments
  • Structure
  • Microfilaments are solid thread-like cylinders
    made of protein and found in a variety of sites
    within the cell.
  • Function
  • Microfilaments are responsible for contractility
    of cells, which is a property of all cells but is
    especially well developed in muscle cells.
  • Contractility is responsible for cell locomotion
    and movements associated with phagocytosis,
    pinocytosis, and cell division.

10
Cell Adhesion Molecules
  • guide cells on the move
  • selectin allows white blood cells to anchor
  • integrin guides white blood cells through
    capillary walls
  • important for growth of embryonic tissue
  • important for growth of nerve cells

11
Structural Components
  • Microtubules
  • Structure
  • Microtubules are hollow tubes present everywhere
    in the cytoplasm in all cells.
  • They are composed of protein tubulin molecules.
  • Function
  • Microtubules contribute to the cytoskeleton, or
    supporting elements, of the cell.
  • They also are involved in cell division, cell
    movements, and the transport of materials from
    one area of the cell to another.

12
Cytoplasmic Organelles
  • Microfilaments and microtubules
  • thin rods and tubules
  • support cytoplasm
  • allows for movement of organelles
  • Inclusions
  • temporary nutrients and pigments

13
Movements Into and Out of the Cell
  • Passive (Physical) Processes
  • require no cellular energy
  • simple diffusion
  • facilitated diffusion
  • osmosis
  • filtration
  • Active (Physiological) Processes
  • require cellular energy
  • active transport
  • endocytosis
  • exocytosis
  • transcytosis

14
Simple Diffusion
  • movement of substances from regions of higher
    concentration to regions of lower concentration
  • oxygen, carbon dioxide and lipid-soluble
    substances

15
Osmosis
  • movement of water through a selectively
    permeable membrane from regions of higher
    concentration to regions of lower concentration
  • water moves toward a higher concentration of
    solutes

16
Osmosis
Osmotic Pressure ability of osmosis to generate
enough pressure to move a volume of water
Osmotic pressure increases as the concentration
of nonpermeable solutes increases
  • hypertonic higher osmotic pressure
  • hypotonic lower osmotic pressure
  • isotonic same osmotic pressure

17
Facilitated Diffusion
  • In facilitated diffusion, the carrier substance
    combines with the solute molecules to form a
    solute-carrier complex, which is soluble in the
    lipid-bilayer, and thus transports the solute
    across the membrane.
  • Once on the other side, the solute is released.
    The carrier breaks away from the complex, returns
    to the exterior of the membrane, and repeats the
    process.
  • The carriers exhibit specificity i.e. they are
    highly selective in distinguishing between
    closely related molecules.
  • Facilitated diffusion can be inhibited by
    competitive and noncompetitive inhibitor
    molecules, which closely resemble the solute
    molecules.
  • The rate of passage of a solute through
    facilitated diffusion depends on
  • its concentration difference on both sides of
    the membrane
  • the number of carrier molecules available
  • how rapidly the solute-carrier complex formation
    takes place.

18
Filtration
  • smaller molecules are forced through porous
    membranes
  • hydrostatic pressure important in the body
  • molecules leaving blood capillaries

19
Active Transport
  • carrier molecules transport substances across a
    membrane from regions of lower concentration to
    regions of higher concentration
  • sugars, amino acids, sodium ions, potassium
    ions, etc.

20
Transport in Vesicles
  • Vesicle - a small spherical sac formed by budding
    off from a membrane
  • Endocytosis - materials move into a cell in a
    vesicle formed from the plasma membrane
  • three types receptor-mediated endocytosis
  • phagocytosis
  • bulk-phase endocytosis (pinocytosis)
  • Exocytosis - vesicles fuse with the plasma
    membrane, releasing their contents into the
    extracellular fluid
  • Transcytosis - a combination of endocytosis and
    exocytosis

21
Phagocytosis
22
Endocytosis
23
Transcytosis
  • endocytosis followed by exocytosis
  • transports a substance rapidly through a cell
  • HIV crossing a cell layer

24
Exocytosis
  • reverse of endocytosis
  • substances in a vesicle fuse with cell membrane
  • contents released outside the cell
  • release of neurotransmitters from nerve cells

25
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26
Nucleus
  • Structure
  • The nuclear envelope consists of a double
    membrane separated by the perinuclear space.
  • The inner membrane is smooth. The outer membrane
    often contains ribosomes and is continuous with
    the surrounding ER.
  • The inner and outer membranes fuse at irregular
    intervals around the nucleus to form nuclear
    pores, which allow for exchange of materials
    between the nucleus and the cytoplasm.
  • Chromatin appears as irregular clumps or granules
    material dispersed throughout the nucleus.
  • Chromatin is composed of coiled strands of DNA
    bound to basic proteins called histones, varying
    amounts of RNA, and other nonhistone proteins and
    enzyme systems.
  • In a dividing cell, the chromatin is condensed
    and coiled into discrete units, the chromosomes.
    Human cells contain 23 pairs of chromosomes.
  • The nucleoplasm is the matrix that surrounds the
    chromatin. It is composed of proteins,
    metabolites, and ions.
  • The nucleolus is a spherical structure composed
    of RNA and protein. The size of the nucleolus and
    the number present vary in different cell types.
    It is missing in cells that do not synthesize
    protein, such as spermatozoa. It is the site of
    ribosome production

27
Ribosomes
  • Structure
  • Ribosomes are small granules composed of
    ribosomal RNA and almost 80 different proteins.
  • They occur as individual granules or in clusters
    called polyribosomes.
  • They may be free in the cytoplasm (free
    ribosomes) or attached to the membranes of the
    endoplasmic reticulum.
  • Function
  • Ribosomes are the site of protein synthesis.
  • Free ribosomes are involved in the synthesis of
    proteins for the cells own use for example, in
    the renewal of enzymes and membranes.
  • Attached ribosomes are the site of synthesis of
    proteins that are secretory products to be
    released from the cell.

28
Golgi Apparatus
  • Function
  • The Golgi apparatus is the site of accumulation,
    concentration, packaging, and chemical
    modification of the secretory products
    synthesized on the rough ER.
  • The transport vesicles pinch off from the ER and
    carry the secretions to the Golgi apparatus,
    where the secretions fuse with its cisternae.
  • The large condensing vacuoles concentrate the
    secretion and package them to become secretory
    granules.
  • Secretory granules, which are large, densely
    packed, membrane-bounded structures, unload their
    contents via exocytosis upon nervous or hormonal
    stimulation.
  • The Golgi apparatus also chemically modifies the
    molecules synthesized in the ER for incorporation
    into the plasma membrane. It adds fatty acid
    residues to certain proteins to convert them to
    lipoproteins, and it synthesizes and attaches
    carbohydrate side chains to proteins to form
    glvcoproteins.
  • The Golgi apparatus processes proteins that
    function intracellularly, such as the lysosome
    enzymes.

29
Golgi Complex
30
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31
The cell cycle and mitosis
  • The cell cycle, in cells that are capable of
    dividing, refers to the events in a cells life
    span in the period between the time it was formed
    by cell division to the beginning of the next
    cell division.
  • The greatest portion of the cycle (about 90) is
    devoted to growth and synthesis, called
    interphase, with a smaller portion devoted to
    nuclear and cell division, or mitosis.

32
The Cell Cycle
33
Stem and Progenitor Cells
34
Mitosis cell copying
35
The End
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