The Cell & Cell Processes. I.Factoids A. You have approximately 7.5 TRILLION cells that make you up. B. 200 different types of cells work together and.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Cell Organelles.
Advertisements

Standard II test review Cells
Grade 8 – Chapter 5 Cells in Their Environment
Cellular Processes Unit 3. Cell Theory O Developed in the 1800s O All living things are made of one or more cells O Cells are the basic unit of structure.
CELLULAR COMPONENTS & PROCESES
Passive Transport. Healthy Cell 70% water 15% protein 10% fat 4% DNA and other materials 1% carbohydrate.
Cell Structure. Two Cell Types 1. Prokaryotic Cells- Simple cells made up of a cell wall, cell membrane, cytoplasm, and DNA. They do not have membrane.
Chapter 7 Cell Structure and Function
Unit 4 Vocabulary 1. Eukaryote- organism whose cells contain a nucleus; Ex: plants, animals 2. Prokaryote- organism whose cells do not contain a nucleus;
Cell Structure and Function
Functions and Transport
Reference: PCI Life Science
Cell Structure and Function
Cell Structure and Function. The Cell Theory v All living things are composed of cells. v Cells are the basic units of structure and function in living.
1. What is a solute? 2. What is a solvent? 3. What is diffusion and osmosis? 4. What does it mean to be active? 5. What does it mean to be selective? 6.
CH. 5 MEMBRANE STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION
Cells.
CELL Structure REVIEW Cell Theory/Cell size
2 Points: Easy Who was the first person to observe cells under a microscope? Robert Hooke.
Chapter 7 Cell Structure and Function. 7.1 The Discovery of Cells  Robert Hooke –Discovered 1 st cell –Observed dead cork cells –Named the cell: basic.
 1. Composed of a phospholipid bi-layer. Permeable to polar materials, non-polar materials must pass through channels.
Have your review of cell structure and function out.
Topic 2: Cells Topic 2: Cells 2.4 Membranes blog.lib.umn.edu.
Chapter 3 Cells Physiology
SPI.1.2 Distinguish between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells.
Standard II test review Cells. Collecting information by Field observations One of the things you might observe is birds on many different islands. You.
Cell Structure and Function Chapter 7 Biology Miller Levine.
Transport Across the Plasma Membrane. Overview Certain substances must move into the cell to support metabolic reactions Certain substances must move.
Cells: Building Blocks of Life. Objective 2.0 Identify functions of organelles found in eukaryotic cells, including the nucleus, cell membrane, cell wall,
Cells
CELLULAR ORGANIZATION. Organisms Are Made of Cells Some organisms are single-celled (unicellular) – Ex. Bacteria, Protists (euglena, paramecium, algae),
Chapter 3 Cells: The Living Units Intro and Membrane.
Unit 5- Cell Membrane & Cell Transport
Cell Structure and Function Chapter 3. Cells Smallest living unit Most are microscopic.
Centrioles Pairs of microtubular structures Play a role in cell division.
DR /Noha Elsayed Anatomy &Physiology CLS 221 Cells and Tissues.
Movement of Materials In and Out of a Cell
Biology Review Part 1 B.4B – Investigate and identify cellular processes including homeostasis, permeability, energy production, transportation of molecules,
Introduction to Cells Ch. 7 Ch. 7 Compound Light Microscope: allows light to pass through a specimen and magnifies the image with lenses Compound Light.
1.What are the two parts of a solution? 2.What percentage must those two parts always add up to? 3.What is a concentration gradient? 4.What is.
 Main component is the PHOSPHOLIPID Fatty acids Hydrophilic head -polar Hydrophobic tail -nonpolar Phosphate group.
Cell Theory Robert Hooke observed compartments in a thin slice of cork. He named them cells.
Cell Structure and Function. Life is Cellular Since the 1600s, scientists have made many discoveries about the cells of living things. Cell Theory: –
Cell Structure and Function Chapter 7
CELL MEMBRANES & DIFFUSION MIXTURE TWO OR MORE ELEMENTS THAT ARE PHYSICALLY MIXED TOGETHER.
Unit 3.  Smallest unit of living organisms  Four basic parts of the cell  Cell membrane – encloses the cell  Nucleus – houses genetic material  Cytoplasm-
DO NOW 1.Label the cell: 2.Take out HW 8 Organelles you must know for the Regents 1.Nucleus- Stores DNA 2.Cell Membrane- Controls what enters and leaves.
Cells: Building Blocks of Life. Objective 2.0 Identify functions of organelles found in eukaryotic cells, including the nucleus, cell membrane, cell wall,
CELL MEMBRANE IN DETAIL. THE CELL MEMBRANE IS NOT A SOLID STRUCTURE. IT IS MADE OF MILLIONS OF SMALLER MOLECULES THAT CREATE A FLEXIBLE AND POROUS CONTAINER.
Introduction It’s estimated the human body has 75 trillion cells Cell shapes vary depending on their function Cell parts also vary depending on the requirement.
Quick Review! Nucleus Nuclear membrane Nuclear Pore Nucleolus Chromatin Ribosome ER- rough & smooth Golgi Complex Centriole Microtubules Cell membrane.
Cells. The Cell Theory All living things are made of _______. Cells are the basic unit of structure and function. New cells are produced from _________cells.
The Cell & Cell Processes. I.Factoids A. You have approximately 7.5 TRILLION cells that make you up. B. 200 different types of cells work together and.
Bell Work: 1/14/14 1. Please pick up your Binder, pick up today’s notes, find your assigned seat and log-in to LEARN on your Laptop. 2. Please open the.
Cell Structure and Function Cells and their Functions Organelle Functions.
Cell Structure & Function
Cells.
Cellular Transport Notes
Cellular Transport Notes
Cellular Transport Notes
Cells and Tissues.
Standard II test review Cells
Cellular Transport Notes
Cellular Transport Notes
Part III: Cellular Processes
Cells: Building Blocks of Life
Without your book or notes
Cellular Transport.
Movement through Membranes
Presentation transcript:

The Cell & Cell Processes

I.Factoids A. You have approximately 7.5 TRILLION cells that make you up. B. 200 different types of cells work together and form the tissues that make up our organs. Remember from your reading that cells have functions.

Cell theory Cells are the basic unit of life. Everything that happens to you happens on a cellular level. Cancer? Cellular. Disease? Cellular. Poison? Cellular. Cells look & perform (structure/function) differently based on their purpose in the cell. To do their “jobs” they come in different sizes & shapes and have different numbers of organelles.

But we study this guy b/c All cells have the same basic parts. 1. PM 2. cytoplasm 3. nucleus And allows us to understand the purpose of any cell if we know the function of the organelles

Organelles “tiny organ”- awe You should know the names and functions of each organelle for your quiz next class! I’m Cute and Tiny

Nucleus Contains nucleolus & DNA. –DNA (genetic material) controls cell processes Nucleus DNA Nucleolus

Nuclear envelope Membrane surrounding / protecting nucleus

Nucleolus Makes Ribosomes

Ribosome Assembles (makes/synthesize s) proteins mRNA tRNA Becomes a protein

Smooth Endoplasmic Reticulum-I’m important! No ribosomes Makes lipids, breaks down toxins, stores calcium in muscle cells

Rough Endoplasmic Reticulum Has ribosomes Packages proteins in pieces of its own membrane

Mitochondria- I’m really important! Transforms food molecules into energy for cell Cellular respiration- the conversion of “food” molecules into ATP. Requires oxygen creates carbon dioxide(why we breathe)

Golgi Apparatus Receives, modifies & packages newly made proteins

Vacuole (animal) Stores food & waste molecules Many small Food Vacuole Waste Vacuole

Lysosome Contains enzymes that break down molecules

Cytoskeleton Network of protein fibers that give cell structure & helps cells move.

Cytoplasm Liquid material that organelles reside in. Cellular metabolism occurs here.

Plasma (Cell) Membrane The plasma (cell) membrane is semi (selectively) permeable. This means that it only allows certain materials in/out of the cell. This is important for maintaining homeostasis inside our cells outside membrane inside

PM proteins- make the PM special! Transport- pump material across Enzymatic- metabolic pathways Receptors- picks up signals (hormones) that activate chemical changes Intercellular- joins 2 cells Recognition- ID tags (glycoproteins) for “Self” recognition*** Attachment- hold cell in place OR help cell move

Cells stick together…sort of… Tight junctions- stop other cells from squeezing in-between cells that are next to each other. Like a fence would stop you from using a gangway between houses. Desmosomes- prevent cells from separating from each other. Like buttons on a shirt stop the shirt sides from opening. In this case the shirt never opens. Gap Junctions: Passing chemicals between cells. Like a drive through window at a fast food restaurant. Got a better simile? Lay it on me.

The space in-between All the fluid in the cell is the cytoplasm. All the fluid outside the cell is the extracellular fluid and it’s called the Interstitial fluid. Comes from blood Mostly water with stuff the cell needs dissolved in it and stuff the cell has released (waste).

Getting stuff in and out WP 3.2

Membrane transport A. Solution: mixture of 2 or more components 1. Ex: seawater B. Solvent: present in the largest amount, what something is dissolving in. 1. Ex: water C. Solute: what dissolves into the solvent 1. Ex: salt

Membrane transport D. Cytoplasm (Intracellular fluid): fluid in the cell w/ gasses, salts & nutrients E. Interstitial fluid: fluid that bathes the outside of the cell. 1. Has thousands of ingredients (sugars, amino acids, fats, vitamins, hormones, salts, waste products)

Membrane transport Passive transport 1. Diffusion: substance moves from higher to lower concentration to balance a.The difference between the 2 concentrations is the concentration gradient b. VY0mZUDvbH4http:// VY0mZUDvbH4

diffusion 1. For diffusion to work there must be a difference in the solute concentration across space or across a membrane called a concentration gradient.

2.) So, we can say that molecules move down their concentration gradients from high concentration to low concentration. Remember: our cells have watery internal & external environments. Diffusion is how solute molecules move in/out of our cells. The same principle also applies to water molecules.

III. Osmosis – the diffusion of water across a semi- permeable membrane from an area of high water concentration to an area of low water concentration. High water/ low salt Low water/ High salt Water moves towards the low concentration of water

A cell loses water by osmosis when the area outside of the cell has less water. a. Ex: Cells shrink in highly salty water “Normal” Interstitial Fluid, Homeostasis between water and salt Low water / High salt in Interstitial Fluid Water moves out of cell and cell shrinks!

Cells will gain water when the area outside of the cell has more water. a. Ex: Cells bloat / explode “Normal” Interstitial FluidInterstitial Fluid too watery Water moves into cell & cell bloats

This is what happened to the woman that drank too much water. Her interstitial fluid became too watery.

Passive Transport: no energy required! Osmosis/Diffusion Facilitated Diffusion High to low Facilitated Diffusion – cell does not use energy, but molecules use protein channels in the plasma membrane to enter the cell.

Filtration: Filtration: pressure (from heart beating) is applied to force water and it’s dissolved materials across a membrane. Ex: Kidneys

Diagram of simple filtration: oversize particles in the feed cannot pass through the lattice structure of the filter, while fluid and small particles pass through, becoming filtrate.

Active transport Active transport= needs energy a. Cells must use energy to move molecules from areas of low concentration to areas of high concentration. Low to High!

Diffusion, osmosis & facilitated diffusion: With the concentration gradient = No Energy Active Transport: Against the concentration gradient = Uses Energy!

Endocytosis a. Intake of food (or water) when the quantity is too large to pass through the membrane. b. Membrane surrounds and pulls substance in. i.Phagocytosis- solid material V699gkhttp:// V699gk (mute)

Exocytosis Transport of substances outside of the cell.

Apply! e.com/watch?v=l79 FuGuk1qE&feature =youtube_gdatahttps:// e.com/watch?v=l79 FuGuk1qE&feature =youtube_gdata Big bugs? Review e.com/watch?v=dP KvHrD1eS4https:// e.com/watch?v=dP KvHrD1eS4 Crash course