Cell Processes - De Soto Area School District
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Transcript Cell Processes - De Soto Area School District
Cell Energy
Middle School Science
Moving materials in cells
Cells need energy 24/7
They cannot make their own, but can
change energy from one form to another
Cells obtain energy from their
environment and convert it to a usable
form
Complex process
Moving materials in cells
Metabolism
The sum of all activities within a cell
Cannot just happen
Need raw materials
Need to eliminate waste
All material needs to enter and exit through
the cell membrane
Moving materials in cells
Materials enter and leave a cell by one of
three methods:
Diffusion
Osmosis
Active transport
Diffusion
Cell membranes in living things need to
allow materials to pass through
Selectively-permeable membrane
Substances pass through the pores
Driving force behind the movement of
many substances into or out of the cell is
diffusion
Diffusion
The process by which molecules of a
substance move from areas of higher
concentration of that substance to areas of
lower concentration of that substance
Diffusion
What causes diffusion to occur?
Mainly small molecules
Driving force behind movement
All molecules are in motion
Solids – molecules move slowly
Liquids – move more quickly
Gases – move quickly
Molecules collide with each other, pushing away
from one another
Diffusion
What causes diffusion to occur?
Driving force behind movement
Collisions will continue as molecules spread out evenly
Diffusion
Why don’t the organelles and cytoplasm
pass through the cell membrane?
Cell membrane is selectively permeable
Permits only certain substances to diffuse
Oxygen, water, and food molecules are permitted to
diffuse into the cell
Carbon dioxide and other waste materials are
permitted to diffuse out of the cell
Osmosis
A special kind of diffusion
The diffusion of water across a selectively
permeable membrane = osmosis
Water is the most important substance
that passes through a cell membrane
About 80% of the cell is water
Diffusion and Osmosis
Diffusion and osmosis are types of passive
transport
They do not require energy to be able to happen –
they just happen
Active Transport
What if the cell needs materials that
cannot diffuse through the membrane?
Active transport “carries” the materials into
or out of the cell
Cells have several forms of active transport
Transport proteins can “pick up” molecules
and carry them into or out of the cell
Requires energy
Ex: calcium, potassium, and sodium
Active Transport
What if the cell needs materials that
cannot diffuse through the membrane?
Transport by engulfing
Another method of active transport
Cell membrane surrounds, or engulfs, a particle
Once surrounded, the cell membrane wraps
around the particle and forms a vacuole within
the cell
Requires energy
Cell Growth and Division
Limits on Cell Growth
Why don’t cells get bigger and bigger?
Has to do with the transportation of materials into
and out of the cell
If a cell were to get too large, its membrane
would not be able to handle the flow of materials
passing through it
The amount of raw materials needed by a large cell
couldn’t enter fast enough
The wastes produced couldn’t leave fast enough
Cell Division
In order for an organism to grow, the total
number of cells must increase
Cell division
One cell divides into two new daughter cells
Occurs in a series of stages, or phases
The process of cell division = mitosis
Mitosis
Phase 1: Chromosomes are copied
Interphase
Cell is performing life functions, not dividing
Chromosomes appear as threadlike coils called
chromatin
In animal cells, the two centrioles can be seen
outside the nucleus
Most plant cells do not have centrioles
Mitosis
Phase 1
Near the end, the process of cell division
begins
The chromosomes are duplicated
Doubling the normal chromosome number in the
cell
Each chromosome and its sister chromosome
(copy) are attached at an area called the
centromere
At this time the sister chromosomes are called
chromatids
Mitosis
Phase 2: Mitosis begins
Prophase
Mitosis begins
Mitosis = the process by which the nucleus of a cell
divides into two nuclei and the formation of two new
daughter cells begins
Threadlike chromatin shorten and form rodlike
chromosomes
Centrioles begin to move to opposite ends of cell
Meshlike spindle develops, forming a bridge
between opposite ends of the cell
Mitosis
Phase 3: Chromosomes attach to the
spindle
Metaphase
The chromosomes begin to attach to the spindle
Chromosomes are attached to the spindle by the
centromere, which still connects each chromatid
to its identical sister chromatid
Mitosis
Phase 4: Chromosomes begin to
separate
Anaphase
The centromere splits
The sister chromatids separate from each other
Chromatids move to opposite ends of cell along
the spindle
The chromatids are again called chromosomes at
this point
Mitosis
Phase 5: Two new nuclei form
Telophase
The chromosomes begin to uncoil and lose their
rodlike appearance
A nuclear membrane forms around the chromatin
at each end of the cell
In each nucleus, a nucleolus reappears
At this point, mitosis is complete but the cell still
has one phase to go through
Mitosis
Phase 6: Two daughter cells form
Cytokinesis
Final phase of cell division
Involves the division of the cytoplasm
The membrane surrounding the cell begins to
move inward until the cytoplasm is pinched in two
Each part contains a nucleus with identical
chromosomes
The cell membrane (or cell wall) complete the
division
Mitosis
Mitosis