chapter 7 a tour of the cell. the cell theory the basic unit of life cells come from cells

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CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL

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Page 2: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

The Cell Theory

• The basic unit of life

• Cells come from cells

Page 3: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

• 17th century – cells observed through microscope (CYTOLOGY)

Microscopes provide windows to the world of the cell

Page 4: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

Microscopy: History

Simple Compound

Page 5: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

Microscopy: History

Page 6: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

Microscopy: History

Page 7: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

Goals of Microscopy

Produce a magnified image of the specimen (Magnification)

Separate the details in the image (Resolving Power)

Render the details visible to the human eye or camera.

Page 8: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

Magnification• Magnification - ratio of an object’s image to its

real size

                                                                                                                     

Onion – 40X Onion – 1000X

Page 9: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

Resolving power

Resolving power is a measure of image clarity.

–It is the minimum distance two points can be separated and still viewed as two separate points.– It is determined by the wavelength of light used                                                                                                      

              

0.2m

0.1nm

Page 10: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

Enhancing Light Microscope Images

Page 11: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

• Electron microscope (EM) -focuses a beam of electrons through the specimen or onto its surface

• Can study only DEAD CELLS!

Page 12: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

• Transmission electron microscopes (TEM) are used mainly to study the internal ultrastructure of cells (2D).

Fig. 7.2a (Rabbit Trachea)

Page 13: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

• Scanning electron microscopes (SEM) are useful for studying surface structures (3D).

Fig. 7.2b

Page 14: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

Gravitational Biology Facility (GBF)

Page 15: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

• Cell fractionation - separate the major organelles of the cells so that their individual functions can be studied.

Cell biologists can isolate organelles to study their functions

Fig. 7.3

Page 16: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

• Ultracentrifuge- a machine that can spin at up to 130,000 revolutions per minute and apply forces more than 1 million times gravity (1,000,000 g).

1) Homogenization- disrupt the cell and release its contents.

2) Spin homogenate in a centrifuge.

3) Heavier pieces will separate into the pellet while lighter particles remain in the supernatant.

4) Repeat at higher speeds and longer durations- smaller and smaller organelles can be collected in subsequent pellets.

Page 17: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

All cells have:

• Plasma membrane.

• Cytoplasm

• Chromosomes

• Genes, DNA

• Ribosomes, (make proteins using the instructions contained in genes)

Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic cells

Page 18: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

The prokaryotic cell

Page 19: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

The Eukaryotic cell

Page 20: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

Prokaryotes• No nucleus, ‘naked’ DNA

• No membrane bound organelles

• Cell wall has peptidoglycan

• Smaller in size (1-10um)

• Nucleus bound by a membrane

• Membrane Bound Organelles

• No peptidolycan in cell wall of plants

• Upto 10 times larger (10- 100um)

• More complex

Eukaryotes

Similarities:-Both have Ribosomes -Are both covered by plasma membrane!-Both have DNA-DNA-> mRNA -> Protein (universal genetic code)

Page 21: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Fig. 7.7

Page 22: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Fig. 7.8

Page 23: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

• The plasma membrane functions as a selective barrier that allows passage of oxygen, nutrients, and wastes

• Made up of phospholipids and proteins

Page 24: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

Nucleus (5 microns)Contains most of the genes

Nuclear Membrane (double) covers it

Pores in Nuclear Membrane (why?)

Nucleolus – rRNA is sythesized here

Chromatin is inside nucleus (DNA+protein)

Chromosomes (46)

NucleusFunction: Stores genes (DNA)

Makes mRNA and other types of RNA

Page 25: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

Ribosomes Made up of rRNA and Protein

Located ‘free’ in cytoplasm or in association with ER/ nuclear membrane (‘bound’)

Function – Protein synthesis ‘benches’

Proteins made on Free ribosomes – these proteins stay in cytoplasm

Proteins made on Bound ribosomes – proteins are located in the Plasma Membrane or exported out of the cell

Page 26: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

Endomembrane System Nuclear Envelope

Endoplasmic Reticulum

Golgi apparatus (or body)

Lysosomes

Vacoules

Plasma Membrane

Page 27: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

Endoplasmic Reticulum Made of sacs - cisternae

2 types: Smooth ER and Rough ER

Smooth ER functions: Lipid synthesis, glucose metabolism, detoxification of drugs (alcohol), muscle contraction

Rough ER functions: Proteins fold in cisternae, some proteins are modified; plasma membrane proteins and phospholipids are synthesized

What cell has a lot of RER?-Cells involved in synthesis of enzymes for digestion ex: pancreasWhat cell has a lot of SER?-Cells involved in detoxification - in a alcoholic!-Cells making steroid hormones!

Page 28: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

Transport Vesicles Pinch off from the ER and contain the macromolecules being transported to the Golgi apparatus

Page 29: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

Golgi Apparatus Made of sacs – cisternae; cis side- receiving, trans side – news vesicles bud off

Functions: Tags (attaches chemical groups), sorts, and packages macromolecules (warehouse)

Page 30: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

Lysosomes

membrane-bounded sac of hydrolytic enzymes that digests macromolecules; low pH (5) inside lysosome protects the cell - how?

Functions:

Phagocytosis-In Amoeba – digestion of food vacoules

Autophagy - recycling of cells own macromolecules (suicide bags)

Destroy bacteria, viruses – in WBC

Page 31: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

Vacuoles

Vesicles and vacuoles (larger versions) are membrane-bound sacs with different functions.

Food vacuoles, fuse with lysosomes during phagocytosis

Contractile vacuoles, pump excess water out of the cell (amoeba)

Central vacuoles are found in many mature plant cells – stores water, salts, proteins, defensive compounds, pigments, metabolic byproducts

Page 32: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

Mitochondria

Mitochondria and chloroplasts are the main energy transformers of cells

Chloroplast• Found only in

photosynthetic organisms (plants, some primitive eukaryotes)

• Site for photosynthesis (makes glucose)

• Has its own DNA• Has its own ribosomes• Has a double outer

membrane• Is semi-autonomous

• Found in plants and animals• Converts macromolecules

into usable energy – ATP (site for cellular respiration)

• Has its own DNA• Has its own ribosomes• Has a double outer

membrane• Is semi-autonomous

What cell has a lot of Mitochondria?-Cells needing a lot of ATP - heart muscle cell (for pumping), and liver cell (synthesis)

Page 33: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells
Page 34: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

– Peroxisome has catalase that converts H2O2 to water;detoxify alcohol and other harmful compounds

Peroxisomes generate and degrade H2O2

Page 35: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

• Network of fibers extending throughout the cytoplasm

Cytoskeleton

• Provides mechanical support and maintains shape

• Provides anchorage for many organelles and enzymes

• Is dynamic - dismantling in one part and reassembling in another to change cell shape.

Page 36: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

Movement of cilia, flagella, muscles

Movement of organelles

Page 37: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

• 3 main types of fibers in the cytoskeleton: Microtubules, Microfilaments, and Intermediate filaments.

Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Page 38: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

1) Microtubules – made of tubulin (protein)

• They grow or shrink as more tubulin molecules are added or removed.

• Move chromosomes during cell division

• Guide organelles

• Are part of centrioles – (important to cell division)

• Make up cilia and flagella

Page 39: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells
Page 40: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells
Page 41: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

Fig. 7.26 The shape of the microvilli in this intestinal cell are supported by microfilaments, anchored to a network of intermediate filaments.

2) Microfilaments (Actin)

-Support-Muscle contraction-Amoeboid movement-Cytoplasmic streaming

Page 42: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

3) Intermediary filaments

- cell shape, organelle location

Page 43: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

• Microfibrils of cellulose embedded in a matrix of proteins and other polysaccharides.

Plant cells are encased by cell walls

Page 44: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

Extracellular matrix (ECM) of animal cells

COLLAGEN-glycoprotein

Page 45: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

• Neighboring cells in tissues, organs, or organ systems often adhere, interact, and communicate through direct physical contact.

• Plant cells are perforated with plasmodesmata, channels allowing cysotol to pass between cells.

Intracellular junctions help integrate cells

Page 46: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

• Animal Cells:

Fig. 7.30

Page 47: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

– Macrophages use actin filaments to move and extend pseudopodia, capturing their prey, bacteria.

– Food vacuoles are digested by lysosomes, a product of the endomembrane system of ER and Golgi.

A cell is a living unit greater than the sum of its parts

Page 48: CHAPTER 7 A TOUR OF THE CELL. The Cell Theory The basic unit of life Cells come from cells

• The enzymes of the lysosomes and proteins of the cytoskeleton are synthesized at the ribosomes.

• The information for these proteins comes from genetic messages sent by DNA in the nucleus.

• All of these processes require energy in the form of ATP, most of which is supplied by the mitochondria.

• A cell is a living unit greater than the sum of its parts.

Fig. 7.31