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The Cell Chapter 3
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Cell Diversity
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Cell Theory All living things are composed of cells Cells are the smallest unit to demonstrate the properties of life Cells are only produced from existing cells
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Typical Animal Cell Plasma membrane – Outer limiting barrier – Detect chemical signals and recognize self from non-self Nucleus – Control center Cytoplasm (cytosol) – Intracellular fluid including organelles (excluding)
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Plasma Membrane’s Role Physical isolation – Separates intracellular from extracellular environment Regulates exchange with environment – Selective permeability Polarity (hydrophobic vs. hydrophilic) Charge (charged vs. uncharged) Size (large vs. small) – Ions & nutrient enter, wastes & secretions exit – Allows a concentration gradient to develop Maintains homeostasis
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The Fluid Mosaic Model Integral proteins – Channels, carriers, and signal transduction Peripheral proteins – Enzymes, cell-cell recognition, and structure Phospholipid bilayer (unsaturated) – Hydrophilic ends – Hydrophobic ends Cholesterol
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Types of Transport Passive Energy not required Movement ‘down’ a concentration gradient Specific types – Diffusion Simple Facilitated – Osmosis – Filtration Active Energy required Movement against a concentration gradient
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Clarifying Solutions Liquid mix of 2+ substances – Aqueous solution when water is solvent Solvent: dissolving agent Solute: substance that is dissolved Reviewing polarity – ‘Like dissolves like’ – Hydrophilic Sugar or salt and water – Hydrophobic Oil and water
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Simple Diffusion Movement of MOLECULES ‘down’ their concentration gradient – Small, nonpolar molecules E.g. O 2 in and CO 2 out in red blood cells – Each substance is independent Continues until equilibrium = no NET movement
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Osmosis Movement of WATER ‘down’ its concentration gradient – Water binds to solute in solution More solute = less free water = less water available to move Depends on TOTAL solute concentration – Selective permeability has a role too water molecules glucose molecules
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Tonicity Ability of a solution to cause a cell to gain or lose water – Depends on [solutes] that can’t cross PM relative to those in the cell Hypotonic solutions have a ___?__ [solute] than the cell – Water moves in – Cells lyse Hypertonic solutions have a ___?__ [solute] than the cell – Water moves out Cells crenate Isotonic solutions have ___?__ [solute] as the cell – Water shows no NET movement
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Other Passive Transport Types Facilitated diffusion Movement same as simple Larger, water soluble substances – Glucose, water, & ions Protein carriers or channels Filtration Water and solutes move ‘down’ a pressure gradient – Water forced, solutes chosen by size Bulk movement
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Active Transport Movement of MOLECULES against their concentration gradient ATP is energy source Maintains disequilibrium
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Vesicular Transport Exocytosis: removes from inside the cell – Golgi vesicles to PM Endocytosis: brings into the cell – PM pinches in to form vesicles – 3 types Phagocytosis Pinocytosis Receptor-mediated
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Plasma Membrane Specializations Microvilli – Folds of PM to increase surface area Membrane Junctions – Tight junctions Integral proteins = impermeable E.g. keep digestive enzymes out of blood – Desmosomes Protein filaments = high tension protection E.g. skin and heart muscle – Gap junctions Integral proteins for communication E.g. heart and smooth muscle
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Nucleus Control center of the cell Nuclear envelope – Double membrane continuous with rough ER – Maintains shape – Nuclear pores for transport; selectively permeable Nucleoli – Build ribosome subunits Chromatin – DNA and protein – Coils/condenses to become visible = chromosomes
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Organelles Within Cytosol Membranous Mitochondria – Produces ATP Endoplasmic reticulum (ER) – Rough – proteins to Golgi – Smooth – lipids & carb production; detoxification Golgi apparatus – Modify and package secretory vesicles Lysosomes – Digestive processes Peroxisomes – Detoxification Nonmembranous Cytoskeleton – Microtubules, microfilaments, & intermediate filaments Centrioles – Formed by microtubules, 9 triplets – Microtubules originate in mitosis Ribosomes – Small and large subunits – Free or attached = dynamic Cilia – Move substances or organism Flagella – 9 + 2 orientation
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The Cell Cycle (IPMATC) Interphase about 90% – Chromosomes not visible yet – G 1 phase – S phase – G 2 phase Mitotic (M phase) cell division – Mitosis is nuclear division Prophase Metaphase Anaphase Telophase – Cytokinesis is cytoplasmic division Repeat as needed
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DNA Replication Helicase – 2 templates formed DNA polymerase – Complementary base pairing Daughter strands – Leading strand – Lagging strand DNA ligase Semiconservative model – Chromatid sister chromatids
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Prophase Events Sister chromatids condense Nuclear envelope begins to disappear Centrioles appear at opposite ends of cell Mitotic spindles form
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Metaphase Events Centrioles at opposite ends of cells Sister chromatids line up with centromere on metaphase plate Microtubules attached to each chromatid at the centromere
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Anaphase Events Sister chromatids separate Single chromosomes move toward opposite ends of the cell – Microtubule ‘tug of war’ Cell elongates
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Telophase Events Daughter nuclei form Nuclear envelope reforms Chromosomes begin to uncoil Mitosis is complete
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Cytokinesis Division of cytoplasm – Begins at the end of telophase (late anaphase too) Cleavage furrow forms – Pinch plasma membrane in 2 2 identical daughter cells formed
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Meiosis Similar to mitosis Reduces genetic material of each daughter cell by half – Diploid (2n) adult produces haploid (n) gametes n = # different chromosomes, paired = homologous Autosomes (22) and sex chromosome (X or Y) Event occurs in 2 cycles – Meiosis I Most variation from mitosis – Meiosis II
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Protein Synthesis DNA RNA protein – Genes instruct, but don’t build – Nucleotides and amino acids are different ‘languages’ – RNA connects them Transcription: same language Translation: different language
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Reviewing DNA and RNA DNA Sugar is deoxyribose – Has –H Bases are A,C, G, and T Double-stranded helix Only in nucleus Modified only by mutations 1 type RNA Sugar is ribose – Has -OH Bases are A, C, G, and U Single-stranded Not confined to nucleus Lots of processing and modifications 3 types (mRNA, tRNA, rRNA)
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Transcription Only 1 template used RNA polymerase – Complementary bases added Steps – Promotion – Elongation – Termination Pre-mRNA processing – Introns spliced out – Exons rejoined – mRNA
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Decoding Genes 4 nucleotide bases to specify 20 amino acids Based on codons – 4 3 = 64 (plenty) Redundancy, but not ambiguity Nearly universal across species
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Translation Ribosome binds mRNA – In cytoplasm tRNA with anticodon binds – Start codon to P site – 2 nd tRNA to A site – Peptide bond joins AA’s Ribosome translocates – P site with 1 st & 2 nd AA – New tRNA to A site Stop codon terminates – Polypeptide folds = protein
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Summary of Protein Synthesis
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