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Cell Structure and Function I
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Cell Theory 1. All living things are made of cells.
2. New cells are produced from existing cells 3. Cells are the basic unit of structure and function in living things.
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Cell Exploration Light Microscopes Living organisms can be seen
Light limits the resolution so extremely small things like proteins and viruses cannot be observed
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Cell Exploration High resolution video technology
Allows scientists to see time elapsed movies of cells as the grow, divide and develop.
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Cell Exploration Transmission Electron Microscopes (TEMs)
Can see more detain and extremely small structures Beams of electrons must pass through ultra-thin sliced samples therefore no living things can be seen
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Cell Exploration Scanning Electron Microscope (SEMs)
Beams of electrons scanned over the surface of a specimen Produces a 3D image Samples must be chemically preserved and removed of all water so no living things can be seen.
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Prokaryotes vs. Eukaryotes
Prokaryotes (bacteria) have no nucleus and very few organelles. DNA is not contained Eukaryotes (protists, fungi, plants and animals) larger,more complex,DNA is inside the nucleus
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Plant Cells Vs. Animal Cells
Both plant and animal cells contain a variety of organelles. Some structures are specific to either plant cells or animal cells only. Only plant cells contain: Cell wall Chloroplasts Large central vacuoles Only animal cells contain: Centrioles
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Smooth ER vs. Rough ER Rough ER - ribosomes on the ER make proteins, the ER modifies the proteins Smooth ER - makes lipids
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Mitochondria vs. Chloroplasts
Mitochondria make energy from chemicals (food molecules) Chloroplasts make energy from light through photosynthesis
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Cytoskeleton Network of protein filaments Maintains shape
Involved in cell movement
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Endoplasmic reticulum
Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Nucleus Endoplasmic reticulum Golgi apparatus Lysosomes Vacuoles Mitochondria Cytoskeleton DNA is free floating Cell membrane Contain DNA
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Cell Structure and Function II
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Cell Wall Provides support and protection for plant cell walls
Made of porous cellulose so it does not regulate what enters and leaves
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Cell Membrane Regulates what enters and leaves the cell and provides support and protection Structure – lipid bilayer with embedded proteins
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Diffusion through Cell Boundaries
Particles move from an area of high concentration to an area of lower concentration No energy is required
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Osmosis Diffusion of water through a selectively permeable membrane
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Is this really Osmosis???
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Isotonic "ISO" means the same
Concentration of solutes (salts) is the same inside and outside of cell. Water flows in and out in equal amounts No effect on cell
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Hypertonic “Hyper” means more
Concentration of solutes is more outside the cell than inside Water flows out of cell The cell shrivels and may die. This is why it is dangerous to drink sea water This is also why "salting fields" was a common tactic during war, it would kill the crops in the field, thus causing food shortages.
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Hypotonic "HYPO" means less
Concentration of solutes is less outside the cell than in. Water flows in The cell swell with water and becomes “turgid”
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Active Transport Carried our by protein pumps found in the membrane
Energy is required
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Facilitated Diffusion
Molecules move through protein channels. No energy required
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Endocytosis Cell takes material into cell by infolding of the cell membrane Phagocytosis – eating – cell engulfs large particles Pinocytosis – drinking – cell takes in liquid animation/animation.htm
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Exocytosis Cell releases large amounts of material
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Cell Specialization The cells in multicellular organisms can develop in different ways to perform different tasks.
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Levels of Biological Organization
Organism Organ system Organ Tissue Cell Organelle DNA Atoms
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