Tour Of The Cell Chapter 6.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Cell Types and Cell Structure
Advertisements

Organelles of Eukaryotic cells
Cell Types and Cell Structure
Vocabulary Review Cells.
Lecture 2 Outline (Ch. 6) I.Prokaryotes vs Eukaryotes II.Organelles Overview III.Endomembrane System IV.Energy Organelles VI.Cytoskeleton VII.Extracellular.
The Cell (Scientists, Theory & Organelles)
 Nucleus: contains most of the genes that control entire cell 1. Nuclear envelope: double membrane, encloses nucleus, regulates molecular traffic by.
Chapter 6 – Cells I – 2 Major types of Cells A. Prokaryotic Cells – Belong to domains Bacteria and Archaea. 1. No true nucleus; lacks a nuclear envelope.
LEARNING ABOUT THE CELL YOU ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR READING AND LEARNING THE MATERIAL IN THIS CHAPTER ON YOUR OWN. YOU WILL BE TESTED ON THIS CHAPTER ALONG.
Cell Structure and Function. Cells Smallest living unit Most are microscopic.
A Tour of the Cell  Every living organism is composed of one or more cells  A cell is the smallest unit having the properties of life  The continuity.
Chapter 6 A Tour of the Cell. Things to Know The differences between eukaryotic and prokaryotic cells The structure and function of organelles common.
Cells. 2 Discovery of Cells Cells were discovered in 1665 by Robert Hooke. Early studies of cells were conducted by - Mathias Schleiden (1838) - Theodor.
Cells. Cell Scientists Robert Hooke looked at cork under a microscope 1 st to use term “cell”
Vocabulary Review Cells. Smallest Unit of Life CELL.
A Tour of the Cell AP Biology Fall Cells are necessarily small Most cells are between 1 and 100 micrometers They have to be that small to allow.
Tour Of The Cell. Microscopy What is the difference between magnification and resolving power? Magnification is how much larger the object can now appear.
Tour Of The Cell. Microscopy What is the difference between magnification and resolving power? Magnification is how much larger the object can now appear.
STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION OF THE CELL CHAPTER 4. CELL STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION- CHAPTER 4 VOCABULARY (33 words) 1. Cell2. Cell theory3. plasma membrane 4.
A Tour of the Cell. Overview: The Cell Cell: the basic unit of all living organisms Cell: the basic unit of all living organisms 2 types: 2 types: Prokaryotic.
AP Exam Review Cells. Prokaryotic vs. Eukaryotic Cells Prokaryote Prokaryote “before” “nucleus” “before” “nucleus” Bacteria Bacteria DNA is concentrated.
Ch.7 A Tour of the Cell. Nucleus Genetic material... chromatin chromosomesnucleolus: rRNA; ribosome synthesis Double membrane envelope with pores Protein.
A TOUR OF THE CELL OVERVIEW
Ch. 6 Warm-Up What are the 2 main types of cells? Which Domains do they consist of? List 3 ways that eukaryotes differ from prokaryotes.
Cell Diversity and Cell Parts
CHAPTER 7 SECTION 7.1: Life is Cellular
Chapter 5: Cell structure & function
HB. 2B.1 Structure and Function of Organelles
Basic Structure of a Cell
Unit 5: Cells Chapter 5.
Cell Organelles Follow along on your chart to check your answers. Make sure that you have the KEY WORDS – you do not have to have everything exactly worded.
Cell Organelles © J Beauchemin 2006
Major types and components of cells
The Cell All organisms are made of cells, the organism’s basic unit of
Cell Structure and Function
A Tour of the Cell: Cell Organelles
Cell Notes Biology A.
Cell Structure.
Today’s Data Here Objective Here!.
Eukaryotic cells Animal and plant cells
Eukaryotic Cells Eukaryotic cells are characterized by having
A Tour of The Cell Chapter 4.
The Cell (Scientists, Theory & Organelles)
CELL STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION
Chapter 6 - A Tour of the Cell.
The Cell.
Ch 4 Openstax/6 Campbell:
THE BASIC STRUCTURE OF LIFE
Chapter 6 A Tour of the Cell.
Cell Introduction Prokaryotic Cell: A cell that is lacking a nucleus and most organelles Eukaryotic Cell: A cell that contains a membrane bound nucleus.
The Cell.
Cell Types and Cell Structures
Chapter 7 Test: Friday Cell Project: 9/25/14
A Tour of The Cell Chapter 4.
Types of Cells There are two broad groups of cells Organelle
Chapter 6 A Tour of the Cell.
Ch. 6 Warm-Up What are the 2 main types of cells? Which Domains do they consist of? List 3 ways that eukaryotes differ from prokaryotes.
CELL STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION
A Tour of the Cell Chapter 4
Membrane-Bound Organelles
CELLS!!!.
The Cell The basic unit of life.
Chapter 6 Part A A tour of The Cell.
Compare and contrast Animal vs. Plant Cells
Chapter 6 Part A A tour of The Cell.
Cell Types and Cell Structure
Goal: To explain the evolution of prokaryotes to eukaryotes.
CHAPTER - 7 CELLS.
Chapter 7 Vocab Quiz: Thursday Test: Friday Cell Project: Th. 2/22/07
Cell Structure & Function
Presentation transcript:

Tour Of The Cell Chapter 6

Microscopy What is the difference between magnification and resolving power? Magnification is how much larger the object can now appear Resolving power is the ability to distinguish between two points It is limited by the wavelength of visible light

The different microscopes Light microscope - resolving power is limited by the wavelengths of light Specimen should be stained, but can be alive compound microscope stereomicroscope Electron microscope - resolving power is greater since wavelengths of electrons are smaller than those of light SEM - 3D image TEM - flat image electron microscopes cannot use live specimens

How did scientists first discover the different cell parts?

As organisms get larger, why do they become multicellular?

It’s all about the surface area to volume ratio!

Prokaryotic vs. Eukaryotic Cells Prokaryotic cells Bacteria, Archaea genetic material not in a nucleus no membrane bound organelles Eukaryotic cells Protists, Plants, Fungi and Animals true nucleus with genetic material has membrane bound organelles

The Prokaryotic Cell

The Plasma Membrane

General Eukaryotic Cells

Two Areas of the Eukaryotic Cell What is the space between the cell membrane and the nucleus called? The cytoplasm. This includes the organelles and the cytosol The cytosol is the fluid medium found in the cytoplasm

The nucleus

Nuclear Components Envelope = double layered membrane that has pores for molecular transport Chromatin = DNA + protein complex of threadlike fibers that make up the eukaryotic chromosome Chromosome = Chromatin fibers condense into visible chromosomes during cell division

Ribosomes Prokaryotic ribosomes differ from eukaryotic ribosomes Function = Site of protein synthesis

The Endomembrane system Related through direct continuity or by transfer on membrane segments through vesicles Structure of membranes is not identical Includes: Nuclear envelope --> Endoplasmic reticulum --> Golgi apparatus --> lysosomes --> vacuoles -->plasma membrane

Transport vesicle from ER New vesicle forming Transport vesicle from Golgi

Functions of Golgi apparatus Modifies stores and routes products of ER Alters membrane phospholipids Targets products for parts of the cell

Vacuoles Larger than vesicles food vacuoles = formed by phagocytosis contractile vacuole = found in fresh water protozoans, keeps water balance central vacuole = found in most plant cells stores organic compounds, has enzymes to break macromolecules, has poisonous and unpalatable compounds, etc.

Mitochondria and Chloroplasts not part of endomembrane system their membrane proteins are made by free ribosomes and their own ribosomes both have small amount of DNA grow and reproduce on their own within the cell involved in energy transformation

Plastids amyloplasts - store starch, in roots and tubers chromoplasts - non-chlorophyll pigments responsible for non-green colors chloroplasts - chlorophyll containing plastids

Peroxisome Contains enzymes that transfer hydrogen from substrates to oxygen producing hydrogen peroxide Some use oxygen to fuel the breakdown of fatty acids to smaller molecules that can be used in the mitochondrion In liver they detoxify alcohol and other poisons by transferring hydrogen from poison to oxygen Hydrogen peroxide is toxic. What enzyme can be used to break this down?

Cytoskeleton Provides structural support Functions in motility and motion

Microtubules cellular support provides tracks for movement within the cell: e.g. transport vesicles composes cilia and flagella, locomotive appendages of certain cells separation of chromosomes during cell division (spindle fiber) composes centrioles in animal cells

Microfilaments smaller than microtublues participates in muscle contraction support localized cell contractions

The Cell Surface cell walls in plant cells membrane linked channel - plasmodesmata that connects cytoplasm between cells

Animal Cell Surfaces glycocalyx - strengthens cell surface, helps glue animal cells together tight junctions - holds cells together to block transport desmosomes - rivets cells together into strong sheets but permits transport gap junctions - analogous to plasmodesmata in plant cells

Let’s Review Name the cell structure and its function Be able to tell if this structure is found in prokaryote, eukaryote, plant and/or animal cells