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The document provides an overview of cellular structure and function including the development of the cell theory, cell shapes and sizes, cellular components like the plasma membrane, cytoplasm and organelles. It describes the structure and functions of the plasma membrane including membrane proteins, receptors, transport mechanisms and permeability.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
21 views

Outline: See Powerpoint Image Slides For All Figures and Tables Pre-Inserted Into Powerpoint Without Notes

The document provides an overview of cellular structure and function including the development of the cell theory, cell shapes and sizes, cellular components like the plasma membrane, cytoplasm and organelles. It describes the structure and functions of the plasma membrane including membrane proteins, receptors, transport mechanisms and permeability.

Uploaded by

Amitabh Majumder
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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You are on page 1/ 78

Chapter 3

Lecture
Outline
See PowerPoint Image Slides
for all figures and tables pre-inserted into
PowerPoint without notes.

3-1
Copyright (c) The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Cellular Form and Function

• Concepts of cellular structure


• Cell surface
• Membrane transport
• Cytoplasm

3-2
Development of the Cell Theory
• Hooke (1665) named the cell
• Schwann (1800’s) states:
all animals are made of cells
• Pasteur (1859) disproved idea of
spontaneous generation
– living things arise from nonliving matter
• Modern cell theory emerged

3-3
Modern Cell Theory

• All organisms composed of cells and cell products.


• Cell is the simplest structural and functional unit of
life.
• Organism’s structure and functions are due to the
activities of its cells.
• Cells come only from preexisting cells.
• Cells of all species have many fundamental
similarities.

3-4
Cell Shapes

3-5
Cell Shapes 2
• Squamous = thin and flat
• Polygonal = irregularly angular with 4 or
more sides
• Cuboidal = squarish
• Columnar = taller than wide
• Spheroid = round
• Discoid = disc-shaped
• Stellate = starlike
• Fusiform = thick in middle, tapered at ends
• Fibrous = threadlike

3-6
Cell Size
• Human cell size
– most from 10 - 15 µm in diameter
• egg cells (very large)100 µm diameter
• nerve cell (very long) at 1 meter long
• Limitations on cell size
– cell growth increases volume faster than
surface area
• nutrient absorption and waste removal utilize
surface

3-7
Cell Surface Area and Volume

3-8
General Cell Structure
• Light microscope reveals plasma membrane,
nucleus and cytoplasm
• Resolution of electron microscopes reveals
ultrastructure
– organelles, cytoskeleton and cytosol

3-9
Major Constituents of Cell

3-10
Plasma Membrane
• Pair of dark parallel lines around cell
(viewed with the electron microscope)
• Defines cell boundaries
• Controls interactions with other cells
• Controls passage of materials in and
out of cell

3-11
Plasma Membrane

• Oily film of lipids with diverse proteins


embedded in it 3-12
Membrane Lipids
• Plasma membrane = 98% lipids
• Phospholipid bilayer
– 75% of the lipids
– hydrophilic heads and hydrophobic tails
– molecular motion creates membrane fluidity
• Cholesterol
– 20% of the lipids
– affects membrane fluidity (low concentration more
rigid, high concentration more fluid)
• Glycolipids
– 5% of the lipids
– contribute to glycocalyx (carbohydrate coating on
cell surface) 3-13
Membrane Proteins
• Membrane proteins
– 2% of the molecules in plasma membrane
– 50% of its weight
• Transmembrane proteins
– pass completely through membrane
– most are glycoproteins
• Peripheral proteins
– adhere to membrane surface
– anchored to cytoskeleton

3-14
Membrane Protein Functions
• Receptors, enzymes, channel proteins (gates),
cell-identity markers, cell-adhesion molecules

3-15
Membrane Receptors

• Cell communication via chemical


signals
– receptors bind these chemicals (hormones,
neurotransmitters)
– receptor specificity
• Receptor activation produces a second
messenger (chemical) inside of the cell

3-16
Second Messenger System

3-17
Second Messenger System
• Chemical messenger (epinephrine) binds
to a surface receptor
• Receptor activates G protein
• G protein binds to adenylate cyclase
which converts ATP to cAMP(2nd
messenger)
• cAMP activates a kinase in the cytosol
• Kinases activates or inactivates other
enzymes triggering physiological changes
in cell

3-18
Membrane Enzymes

• Break down chemical messengers to


stop their signaling effects
• Final stages of starch and protein
digestion in small intestine
• Produce second messengers (cAMP)

3-19
Membrane Channel Proteins

• Transmembrane proteins with pores


– some constantly open
– gated-channels open and close in response to
stimuli
• ligand (chemically)-regulated gates
• voltage-regulated gates
• mechanically regulated gates (stretch and pressure)
• Important in nerve signal and muscle
contraction

3-20
Membrane Carriers or Pumps
• Transmembrane proteins bind to
solutes and transfer them across
membrane
• Pumps = carriers that consume ATP

3-21
Membrane Cell-Adhesion Molecules

• Adhere cells to each other and to


extracellular material

3-22
Membrane Cell-Identity Markers
• Glycoproteins form the glycocalyx
– surface coating
– acts as a cell’s identity tag
• Enables body to identify “self” from
foreign invaders

3-23
Glycocalyx
• Unique fuzzy cell surface
– carbohydrate portions of membrane
glycoproteins and glycolipids
– unique in everyone but identical twins
• Functions (see Table 3.2)
– cell recognition, adhesion and protection

3-24
Microvilli
• Extensions of membrane (1-2m)
• Some contain actin
• Function
– increase surface area for absorption
• brush border
– milking action of actin
• actin filaments shorten microvilli
– pushing absorbed contents down into cell

3-25
Cross Section of a Microvillus

Note: actin microfilaments are found in center of each


microvilli. 3-26
Cilia
• Hairlike processes 7-10m long
– single, nonmotile cilium found on nearly every cell
– Sensory in inner ear, retina and nasal cavity
• Motile cilia
– beat in waves
– power strokes followed by recovery strokes

Chloride pumps produce saline layer at cell surface.


Floating mucus pushed along by cilia. 3-27
Cross Section of a Cilium
• Axoneme has 9 + 2
structure of
microtubules
– 9 pairs form basal body
inside the cell membrane
– dynein arms “crawls” up
adjacent microtubule
bending the cilia

3-28
Cystic Fibrosis
• Hereditary disease
– chloride pumps fail to
create adequate saline
layer under mucus
• Thick mucus plugs
pancreatic ducts and
respiratory tract
– inadequate absorption of
nutrients and oxygen
– lung infections
– life expectancy of 30
3-29
Flagella
• Whiplike structure with axoneme
identical to cilium
– much longer than cilium
• Tail of the sperm = only functional
flagellum

3-30
Membrane Transport
• Plasma membrane selectively permeable
– controls what enters or leaves cell
• Passive transport requires no ATP
– movement down concentration gradient
– filtration and simple diffusion
• Active transport requires ATP
– movement against concentration gradient
– carrier mediated (facilitated diffusion and active
transport)
– vesicular transport

3-31
Filtration
• Movement of particles through a
selectively permeable membrane by
hydrostatic pressure
• Examples
– filtration of nutrients from blood capillaries
into tissue fluids
– filtration of wastes from the blood in the
kidneys
3-32
Simple Diffusion
• Net movement of particles from area of
high concentration to area of low
concentration
– due to their constant, random motion
• Also known as movement down the
concentration gradient

3-33
Diffusion Rates
• Factors affecting diffusion rate through a
membrane
– temperature -  temp.,  motion of particles
– molecular weight - larger molecules move slower
– steepness of concentrated gradient - difference,
 rate
– membrane surface area -  area,  rate
– membrane permeability -  permeability,  rate

3-34
Membrane Permeability
• Diffusion through lipid bilayer
– Nonpolar, hydrophobic substances diffuse
through lipid layer
• Diffusion through channel proteins
– water and charged hydrophilic solutes
diffuse through channel proteins
• Cells control permeability by regulating
number of channel proteins

3-35
Osmosis
• Diffusion of water
through a membrane
– from area of more
water to area of less
water
• Aquaporins = channel
proteins specialized
for osmosis

3-36
Osmotic Pressure
• Amount of
hydrostatic pressure
required to stop
osmosis
• Osmosis slows due
to filtration of water
back across
membrane due to 
hydrostatic pressure
3-37
Osmolarity
• One osmole = 1 mole of dissolved
particles
– 1M NaCl ( 1 mole Na+ ions + 1 mole Cl-
ions) thus 1M NaCl = 2 osm/L
• Osmolarity = # osmoles/liter of solution
• Physiological solutions are expressed
in milliosmoles per liter (mOsm/L)
– blood plasma = 300 mOsm/L
– osmolality similar to osmolarity at
concentration of body fluids 3-38
Tonicity
• Tonicity - ability of a solution to affect fluid
volume and pressure within a cell
– depends on concentration and permeability of solute
• Hypotonic solution
– low concentration of nonpermeating solutes (high
water concentration)
– cells absorb water, swell and may burst (lyse)
• Hypertonic solution
– has high concentration of nonpermeating solutes (low
water concentration)
– cells lose water + shrivel (crenate)
• Isotonic solution = normal saline 3-39
Effects of Tonicity on RBCs

Hypotonic, isotonic and hypertonic solutions affect the fluid


volume of a red blood cell. Notice the crenated and swollen
cells. 3-40
Carrier Mediated Transport
• Proteins carry solutes across cell
membrane
• Specificity
– solute binds to a specific receptor site on
carrier protein
– differs from membrane enzymes because
solutes are unchanged
• Types of carrier mediated transport
– facilitated diffusion and active transport
3-41
Membrane Carrier Saturation

• Transport maximum = transport rate when all


carriers are occupied
3-42
Membrane Carriers
• Uniporter
– carries only one solute at a time
• Symporter
– carries 2 or more solutes simultaneously in same
direction (cotransport)
• Antiporter
– carries 2 or more solutes in opposite directions
(countertransport)
• sodium-potassium pump brings in K+ and removes Na+
from cell
• Any carrier type can use either facilitated
diffusion or active transport
3-43
Facilitated Diffusion
• Transport of solute across membrane down its
concentration gradient
• No ATP used
• Solute binds to carrier, it changes shape then
releases solute on other side of membrane

3-44
Active Transport
• Transport of solute across membrane up
(against) its concentration gradient
• ATP energy required to change carrier
• Examples:
– sodium-potassium pump
– bring amino acids into cell
– pump Ca2+ out of cell

3-45
Sodium-Potassium Pump
• Needed because Na+ and K+ constantly leak
through membrane
– half of daily calories utilized for pump
• One ATP utilized to exchange three Na+ pushed
out for two K+ brought in to cell

3-46
Functions of Na -K Pump + +

• Regulation of cell volume


– “fixed anions” attract cations causing osmosis
– cell swelling stimulates the Na+- K+ pump to
 ion concentration,  osmolarity and cell swelling
• Heat production (thyroid hormone increase # of
pumps; heat a by-product)
• Maintenance of a membrane potential in all cells
– pump keeps inside negative, outside positive
• Secondary active transport (No ATP used)
– steep concentration gradient of Na+ and K+ maintained
across the cell membrane
– carriers move Na+ with 2nd solute easily into cell
• SGLT saves glucose in kidney 3-47
Vesicular Transport
• Transport large particles or fluid
droplets through membrane in vesicles
– uses ATP
• Exocytosis –transport out of cell
• Endocytosis –transport into cell
– phagocytosis – engulfing large particles
– pinocytosis – taking in fluid droplets
– receptor mediated endocytosis – taking in
specific molecules bound to receptors
3-48
Phagocytosis or “Cell-Eating”

3-49
Keeps tissues free of debris and infectious microorganisms.
Pinocytosis or “Cell-Drinking”
• Taking in droplets of ECF
– occurs in all human cells
• Membrane caves in, then pinches off
into the cytoplasm as pinocytotic
vesicle

3-50
Transcytosis

• Transport of a substance across a cell


• Receptor mediated endocytosis moves it into
cell and exocytosis moves it out the other side
– insulin 3-51
Receptor Mediated Endocytosis

3-52
Receptor Mediated Endocytosis
• Selective endocytosis
• Receptor specificity
• Clathrin-coated vesicle in cytoplasm
– uptake of LDL from bloodstream

3-53
Exocytosis
• Secreting material or replacement of plasma
membrane

3-54
The Cytoplasm
• Organelles = specialized tasks
– bordered by membrane
• nucleus, mitochondria, lysosome, perioxisome,
endoplasmic reticulum, and Golgi complex
– not bordered by membrane
• ribosome, centrosome, centriole, basal bodies
• Cytoskeleton
– microfilaments and microtubules
• Inclusions
– stored products

3-55
Nucleus
• Largest organelle (5 m in diameter)
– some anuclear or multinucleate
• Nuclear envelope
– two unit membranes held together at
nuclear pores
• Nucleoplasm
– chromatin (thread-like matter) = DNA and
protein
– nucleoli = dark masses where ribosomes
produced 3-56
Micrograph of The Nucleus

3-57
Rough Endoplasmic Reticulum
• Parallel, flattened membranous sacs
covered with ribosomes
• Continuous with nuclear envelope and
smooth ER
• Synthesis of packaged proteins
(digestive glands) and phospholipids
and proteins of plasma membrane

3-58
Smooth Endoplasmic Reticulum
• Lack ribosomes
• Cisternae more tubular and branching
• Synthesis of membranes, steroids
(ovary and testes) and lipids,
detoxification (liver and kidney), and
calcium storage (skeletal and cardiac
muscle)

3-59
Smooth and Rough ER

3-60
Endoplasmic Reticulum

3-61
Ribosomes

• Granules of protein and RNA


– found in nucleoli, free in cytosol and on
rough ER
• Uses directions in messenger RNA to
assemble amino acids into proteins
specified by the genetic code (DNA)

3-62
Golgi Complex
• System of flattened sacs (cisternae)
• Synthesizes carbohydrates, packages
proteins and glycoproteins
• Forms vesicles
– lysosomes
– secretory vesicles
– new plasma membrane

3-63
Golgi Complex

3-64
Lysosomes
• Package of enzymes in a single unit
membrane, variable in shape
• Functions
– intracellular digestion of large molecules
– autophagy - digestion of worn out
organelles
– autolysis - programmed cell death
– breakdown stored glycogen in liver to
release glucose
3-65
Lysosomes and Peroxisomes

3-66
Peroxisomes
• Resemble lysosomes but contain different
enzymes
• In all cells but abundant in liver and kidney
• Functions
– neutralize free radicals, detoxify alcohol, other
drugs and toxins
– uses O2 , H2O2 and catalase enzyme to oxidize
organic molecules
– breakdown fatty acids into acetyl groups for
mitochondrial use

3-67
Mitochondrion
• Double unit membrane
– inner membrane folds called
cristae
• ATP synthesized by enzymes on
cristae from energy extracted
from organic compounds
• Space between cristae
called matrix
– contains ribosomes and
small, circular DNA molecule
(mtDNA)

3-68
EM of Mitochondrion

3-69
Evolution of Mitochondrion
• Evolved from bacteria that invaded primitive
cell but was not destroyed
• Double membrane formed from bacterial
membrane and phagosome
• Has its own mtDNA
– mutates readily causing degenerative diseases
• mitochondrial myopathy and encephalomyopathy
• Only maternal mitochondria inherited (from
the egg)
– sperm mitochondria usually destroyed inside egg

3-70
Centrioles
• Short cylindrical assembly of microtubules
(nine groups of three )
• Two perpendicular centrioles near nucleus
form an area called the centrosome
– role in cell division
• Cilia formation
– single centriole migrates to plasma membrane to
form basal body of cilia or flagella
– two microtubules of each triplet elongate to form
the nine pairs of the axoneme
– cilium reaches full length rapidly

3-71
Centrioles

3-72
Cytoskeleton
• Collection of filaments and tubules
– provide support, organization and movement
• Composed of
– microfilaments = actin
• form network on cytoplasmic side of plasma membrane
called the membrane skeleton
– supports phospholipids and microvilli and produces cell
movement

– intermediate fibers
• help hold epithelial cells together; resist stresses on
cells; line nuclear envelope; toughens hair and nails
– microtubules 3-73
Microtubules
• Cylinder of 13 parallel strands called protofilaments
– (a long chain of globular protein called tubulin)
• Hold organelles in place; maintain cell shape; guide
organelles inside cell
• Form axonemes of cilia and flagella, centrioles, basal
bodies and mitotic spindle
• Can be disassembled and reassembled

3-74
Cytoskeleton

3-75
EM and Fluorescent Antibodies
demonstrate Cytoskeleton

3-76
Inclusions
• No unit membrane
• Stored cellular products
– glycogen granules, pigments and fat
droplets
• Foreign bodies
– dust particles, viruses and intracellular
bacteria

3-77
Table 3.4
• Summary of organelles: their appearance and function

3-78

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