The Cell Offical Notes
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Transcript The Cell Offical Notes
Biology
The Study of Living Organisms
What is Living?
Use Energy
Metabolism
Develop and Grow
Homeostasis
Maintain themselves
Reproduction
Asexual – reproduction by yourself
Sexual reproduction
Evolve
Made of Cells
Macromolecules
Large molecules made of smaller
molecules linked together
Four Major Types:
Protein
Carbohydrates
Lipids
Nucleic Acids
Macromolecules
Protein
Subunit: amino acids
20 amino acids in
living organisms
Skin, hair, feathers,
insulin, hemoglobin,
antibodies, enzymes
Macromolecules
Carbohydrates
Subunits: Saccharides (sugars)
Starch, glycogen, cellulose
Macromolcules
Lipids
Fatty acid + carboxyl group
Used for long term energy storage
Fats, oils
Macromolecules
Nucleic Acids
Subunit: Nucleotide
DNA and RNA
Store Genetic Information
The Cell Theory
Some Random Cell Facts
The average human being is composed
of around 100 Trillion individual cells!!!
It would take as many as 50 cells to
cover the area of a dot on the letter “i”
WOW!!!
Discovery of Cells
Robert Hooke (1665)
Discovered cells while looking at a thin slice of cork.
He described the cells as tiny boxes
He thought that cells only existed in plants
Anton van Leuwenhoek
1673- Observed single-celled organisms in pond
water
He called them “animalcules”
The cells were living
Therefore, it was known
that cells are found
in animals as well as plants
Spirogyra
Development of Cell Theory
1838- Matthias Schleiden, concluded that all
plant parts are made of cells
1839- Theodor Schwann, stated that all animal
tissues are made of cells.
Development of Cell Theory
1858- Rudolf Virchow (physician) found that
cells must arise from preexisting cells while
studying disease.
The Cell Theory
HAS 3 PARTS:
1. All organisms are composed of one or more cells.
(Schleiden & Schwann)
2. Cells are the basic units of structure and function
in an organism. (Schleiden & Schwann)
3. Cells come only from the reproduction of existing
cells. (Virchow)
Two Types of Cells
1.
Prokaryotes
First living cells
Bacteria and Archaea
No organelles
No nucleus
2.
Eukaryotes
Animals and Plants
Organelles
Nucleus
Prokaryotic or Eukaryotic?
Cell Parts
Membrane and Wall
Genetic Material
Organelles
Structures that
perform specific
functions in the cell
Cell Membrane
Selectively permeable phospholipid bilayer
Found in prokaryotes and eukaryotes
Nucleus
Nickname: “The Control Center”
Function: holds the DNA
Mitochondria
Nickname: “The Powerhouse”
Function: Energy formation
Breaks down food to make ATP
– ATP: is the major fuel for all cell activities that
require energy
Mitochondria
Mitochondrial DNA
Ancient Eukaryotic cell ate a prokaryotic
cell
Ribosomes
Function: makes proteins out of Amino
Acids
Found in all cells
prokaryotic and eukaryotic have
different types
Endoplasmic Reticulum
2 Types:
1. Rough ER:
– Ribosomes on surface
– Function: helps make proteins and
phospholipids
Endoplasmic Reticulum
2 Types:
2. Smooth ER:
– NO ribosomes
– Function: makes fats or lipids, breaks down
drugs
Golgi Apparatus
Nickname: The Post Office
Function: packages, modifies, and
transports materials to inside/outside of
the cell
Lysosomes
Nickname: “Clean-up Crews”
Function: Digest food particles, waste,
cell parts, and foreign invaders
Have lower pH and special enzymes
Cytoskeleton
Gives Cells Shape and Support
Microtubules
Intermediate Filaments
Microfilaments
Cilia and Flagella
Both help with cell movement
Cilia
Flagella
•Short
•Long
•Hairlike
•One or two per cell
•numerous
What do Plant Cells Have?
1.
2.
3.
Cell Wall
Vacuole
Chloroplasts
Pine Needle
Plant Cell
Cell Wall
Outside of plasma membrane
Made of cellulose
Plant Cell
Vacuole
Stores water, waste, enzymes
Can make up 90% of plant cell volume
Causes plant to stand upright
Plant Cell
Chloroplasts
Make carbohydrates from CO2 and H2O using light
energy
Contain Thylakoids with chlorophyll
Animal Cell vs. Plant Cell
Cell Membrane
Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic
Membrane Proteins
Communication
Join cells together
Control transport across membrane
Carbohydrates
Allow cells to recognize each other
Fluid Mosaic Model
Phospholipids and proteins can slide past
each other
Transport Across Membrane
Diffusion
Osmosis
Tendency of molecules to move from high
concentration to low concentration
Diffusion of water
Works for small hydrophobic molecules
Transport Across Membrane
Facilitated Diffusion
Ions and large molecules
cannot pass freely across
the membrane
Carrier proteins
Allow molecules to move
down the concentration
gradient
NO ENERGY NEEDED!
Passive Transport
Transport Across Membrane
Active Transport
Carrier proteins move molecules AGAINST
the concentration gradient
Requires energy
Transport Across Membrane
Endocytosis
Portion of membrane folds inward and
pinches off
Transport Across Membrane
Exocytosis
Vesicle fuses with membrane and dumps
contents outside
Cell Size
Most cells are 10 to
50µm in diameter
Prokaryotes are
typically smaller
than eukaryotes
YUM….You’re eating an entire cell!
Cell Size
The ratio of the surface area to the
volume limits cell size
Which increases faster, surface area or
volume?
Why would
having a low
surface area
to volume
ratio be
important?
Cell Shape
Different cells have different shapes
based on function