cp bio : chapter 7 cell structure and function

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CP BIO: Chapter 7 Cell Structure and Function The cell is the basic unit of life 1

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CP BIO : Chapter 7 Cell Structure and Function. The cell is the basic unit of life. 1. Discovery of the Cell. Robert Hooke 1660s cork “cells” Anton von Leeuwenhoek 1660s first high-mag microscope living cells, bacteria Pond water, blood, saliva. All living things made of cells. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

CP BIO: Chapter 7 Cell Structure and Function

The cell is the basic unit of life

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Page 2: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Discovery of the Cell• Robert Hooke 1660s

– cork “cells”

• Anton von Leeuwenhoek 1660s– first high-mag microscope– living cells, bacteria– Pond water, blood, saliva

Page 3: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

All living things made of cells

• Matthias Schleiden 1830s– all plants made of cells

• Theodore Schwann 1830s – all animals made of cells

• Rudolf Virchow 1850s– new cells come from cell division

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Page 4: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

The Cell Theory

1. All organisms are made of one or more cells2. The cell is the basic unit of life. Cells that

form part of a larger organism still do their own life processes.

3. All cells come from pre-existing cells

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Page 5: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Why are all cells small?

Cells vary in size and shape

• Must contain raw materials and molecules needed by cell

• Must have fast exchange with environmentSurface area must be large compared to volume

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Page 6: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

size increases (1mm2mm) 2X (14) 4X

area increases (24/6) 4X (96/6) 16X

volume increases (8/1) 8X (64/1) 64X

Cells have large Surface-to-Volume Ratio

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Page 7: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Two basic kinds of cells Prokaryotic Eukaryoticsmall and simple larger and more

complexno nucleus nucleusbacteria all other organisms

Both have: DNA & complex chemicals, cell membrane, cytoplasm, ribosomes

Page 8: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Two kinds of cells

Bacteria (purple) in animal cell (pink)

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Page 9: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Prokaryotes “before nucleus”

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Page 10: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

All prokaryotes have1. Nucleoid

• Region containing DNA, one chromosome2. Cell (plasma) membrane

• Encloses cytoplasm• Controls what enters and leaves cell

3. Cell wall• Outside membrane• Cell shape and protection

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Page 11: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

SOME prokaryotes have

4. Capsule – protective layer • Slimy or sticky coating, outside cell wall

5. Pili – extensions of cytoplasm• to attach to other cells, pass signals

6. Prokaryotic flagella – for movement7. Plasmids – small rings of DNA

• have special genes

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Page 12: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Some prokaryotic cells

Common shapes of bacteria

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Page 13: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Eukaryotic Cells “true nucleus”

Eukaryotes have membrane compartments– Larger than prokaryotes (10-100 m)– Many organelles – tiny “organs”, with specific

functions– Most organelles are enclosed by a membrane

• Keeps chemistry inside organelle separate from rest of cell

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Page 14: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

7.2 Cell StructureThe cell is like a city – every part has a job to do. Together these parts keep the cell alive.

Page 15: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Cytoplasm

• Watery solution outside nucleus

• Has many dissolved substances for metabolism

• Site for chemical reactions• Contains organelles, each

has a function

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Page 16: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Nucleus- control center of cell

• Has most of the DNA • Chromosomes – structures

containing DNA• Chromatin – loose, thread-

like form of chromosomes when cell is not dividing

• Nucleolus – makes ribosomes

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Page 17: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Nuclear Envelope

• Membrane surrounding nucleus• Many pores for molecules to pass through• Selectively permeable – controls what moves

in and out of nucleus

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Page 18: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Organelles that Build Proteins

Ribosomes• Makes proteins, uses instructions in DNA• Made of RNA and protein• Made in nucleolus, move to cytoplasm and

rough ER

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Page 19: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Endoplasmic Reticulum- membrane channels throughout cell- make and transport materials- large surface area for reactions

Rough ER - has ribosomes - makes and modifies proteins

Page 20: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Smooth ER• No ribosomes on membrane • Makes and transports lipids• Other functions in special tissues

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Page 21: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Golgi Apparatus

• Layers of membrane sacs• Receives proteins made in ER• Sorts and packages proteins

into tiny vesicles• Final products may be used by

cell (ex. lysosome) or exported from cell

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Page 22: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

LysosomesMembrane sacs of digestive enzymes1. Break down wastes and worn-out cell parts2. Recycle molecules the cell can use3. In one-celled, join to food vacuoles to digest food 4. In development, remove tissue no longer needed (ex. tadpole tail)5. In defense, white blood cells digest bacteria6. In Cell death – when cell is damaged beyond repair

Page 23: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Organelles that capture and release energy

Mitochondria“Powerhouse of the cell” – site for cell respiration• Releases chemical energy from food and

changes into energy cell can use ATP• ATP – energy molecule in all organisms

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Page 24: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Plastids – in plants Chloroplasts• Site for photosynthesis: capture sun energy and

change it into chemical energy of food• Layered membranes inside contain green pigment

chlorophyll

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Page 25: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Leukoplasts and Chromoplasts

Leukoplasts store starch

Chromoplasts store other pigments -flowers, fruits, seeds

24In red pepper

In potato

Page 26: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Mitochondria and Chloroplasts are different from other organelles

1. double-layered membrane organelles - inner membrane deeply folded/layered - large surface area for fast chemical processes

2. have their own DNA and ribosomes- can self-replicate as needed

- make their own enzymes for reactions

Page 27: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Organelles that store and clean up

Food vacuole in paramecium

Page 28: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Plant Vacuoles

Stores water and substances needed for photosynthesis

Also has enzymes to recycle molecules

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Page 29: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Contractile Vacuole

• In some one-celled organisms that live in fresh water

• Water enters cell from environment

• Vacuole pumps out excess water

• Keeps homeostasis

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Page 30: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

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Lysosomes are stained in this slide

Page 31: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

The Cytoskeleton

• Protein framework inside cell• Attach to cell membrane to

keep cell shape• Anchor organelles• Transport materials inside

cellTwo kinds: microfilaments and microtubules

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Page 32: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Microfilaments

• Flexible, elastic threads• Support cell and help cells move

– Move substances around inside cell– Cytoplasmic streaming– May form pseudopods

Cytoplasmic streaming lets

amoeba eat by encircling food 32

Page 33: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Microtubules

• Hollow rigid tubes keep cell shape• Tracks for moving molecules in cell• Also found in cilia, flagella (for movement) and in

centrioles and spindle fibers (for cell division)

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Page 34: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Cytoskeleton and Cell Wall

Page 35: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Cilia and FlagellaExtensions on cell surface

• Cilia – short, many, like “oars”– Ex. line air passages in our body

- cover Paramecium

• Flagella – longer, one or a few, move like a “whip”– Ex. Human sperm, euglena

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Page 36: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Centrioles and Spindle Fibers

• Help in cell division• Centrioles (only in animal cells)

– Organize spindle fibers• Spindle fibers (in all eukaryotic cells)

• Organize and separate chromosomes when cell divides

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Page 37: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Cell BoundariesKeep cell contents separated from surroundings

Cell (plasma) membrane – in ALL CELLS• Selectively permeable• controls which substances move in or out of

cell• Maintains homeostasis

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Page 38: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

The Cell Membrane

Double layer of phospholipids and proteins

Page 39: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

The Cell Wall• In many organisms, but NOT animals• Outside cell membrane• For shape, support, protection• Some substances can pass through• In plants – mostly cellulose• Also in fungi, most bacteria, some protists

Page 40: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Cellulose fibers in cell wall

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Page 41: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Cell Junctions• Connects cells to form tissues• Cells can communicate and share materials

Gap junction anchoring junction tight junction

Page 42: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

How do plant and animal cells differ? Plant cells also have:

1. rigid cell wall, contains cellulose 2. chloroplasts – do photosynthesis

3. large central vacuole – stores water and molecules for photosynthesis

Animal cells have: 1. centrioles – for cell division

2. lysosomes – break down wastes3. some have flagella or cilia

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Page 43: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Endosymbiosis TheoryTheory for how eukaryotic cell evolved

1. Prokaryotes are different sizes2. Larger prokaryotes ate smaller ones3. Some were not digested, but became part of cell4. Might have survival advantage

– ex. make its own food; use energy efficiently

Page 44: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Endosymbiosis Theory

Page 45: CP BIO :  Chapter 7   Cell  Structure and Function

Evidence to support theory

Chloroplasts and mitochondriaa) have double membranesb) Have their own DNA and ribosomesc) Can self-replicate

May have once been separate organisms