1 / 24

Chapter 4

Chapter 4. Cell Structure & Function. Pioneers. Robert Hooke, 1665 Viewed cork, noted “ cellulae ” (monk’s cells) Anton van Leeuwenhoek, 1676 First visualized “animalcules” Theodore Schwann, Matthias Schleiden , 1830s Described cell division, nuclei, all living things made of cells

albina
Download Presentation

Chapter 4

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 4 Cell Structure & Function

  2. Pioneers • Robert Hooke, 1665 • Viewed cork, noted “cellulae” (monk’s cells) • Anton van Leeuwenhoek, 1676 • First visualized “animalcules” • Theodore Schwann, Matthias Schleiden, 1830s • Described cell division, nuclei, all living things made of cells • Rudolf Virchow, 1858 & later • All cells arise from pre-existing cells

  3. Cell theory • Every living organism is composed of one or more cells • A cell is the smallest unit having the properties of life • The continuity of life directly arises from the growth and division of single cells

  4. Cell basics • Plasma membrane • Lipid bilayer • Regulates transport in/out of cell • Genetic material • Nucleus • Nucleoid • Cytoplasm

  5. Cell size • Metabolic activity related to cell volume and surface area • Volume increases faster than surface area • The speed and amount of “stuff” (waste & nutrients) across a cell membrane is determined by the surface area • Larger cell volume needs more nutrients and produces more waste • Eventually the cell becomes big enough that the membrane can’t transport “stuff” fast enough

  6. Cell types • Prokaryotes • Eukaryotes

  7. prokaryotes • “Before the nucleus”—no nucleus or membrane-covered structures (organelles) • True bacteria • Archaebacteria • Very small • Simplest cells

  8. prokaryotes • Nucleoid region • DNA (single loop) • Cell membrane • Cell wall (in some) • Capsule (in some) • Cytoplasm • Ribosomes • Pili • Flagellum

  9. eukaryotes • Nucleus and other complex organelles • Organelle—internal membrane-bound compartment that serves specialized functions. “Little organs” • Protozoans • Algae • Fungi • Plants • Animals

  10. eukaryotes • Complex systems

  11. eukaryotes • Nucleus • Control center • Houses DNA (6 feet!!!) • Nuclear envelope/membrane • Regulates transport of molecules • Receptors for signaling • Nucleolus • Constructs ribosomes

  12. eukaryotes • Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER) • Rough • Ribosomes attach • Protein synthesis • Smooth • No ribosomes • Lipid synthesis

  13. Eukaryotes • Ribosomes • Synthesize proteins

  14. eukaryotes • Golgi Bodies • Package and process proteins & lipids • Vesicles—sacs containing enzymes • Lysosomes—intracellular digestion • Peroxisomes—break down fatty acids & proteins • Vacuoles—large vesicles for storing food & water • Only some eukaryotes

  15. Eukaryotes

  16. eukaryotes • Mitochondria • Forms ATP (energy) • Requires oxygen • H+ stored in outer compartment, controlled flow into inner • Similar to bacteria: have their own DNA & ribosomes

  17. Eukaryotes (plants) • Plastids • Chlorloplasts—Photosynthesis (energy from light) • Chromoplasts—color • Amyloplasts—store starches • Central Vacuole • Storage (amino acids, sugars, ions, wastes)

  18. Eukaryotes (animals) • Centrioles—produce microfilaments during cell division.

  19. Eukaryote surface • Cell membrane—regulates movement of “stuff” in and out of cell • Cell wall—strong, gives permanent shape to cell

  20. cytoskeleton • Protein filaments between nucleus & plasma membrane • Microtubules—keep organelles & cell structures in place or move them • Can fall apart in controlled ways (amoebas) • Some poisons can affect

  21. cytoskeleton • Microfilaments • Thin filaments • Help in cell division (contracts midsection) • Anchor membrane proteins • Muscle contraction

  22. movement • Motor proteins move things within cells • Flagella—long outer structures for movement • Usually only a few • Cilia—short outer structures for movement • Usually many • Pseudopod • “False foot”

  23. Plant vs. animal • Plant cells • Have cell walls & cell membranes • Have plastids such as chloroplasts • Have a central vacuole • Do not have centrioles • Animal cells • Have cell membrane but no cell wall • Do not have plastids • Do not have a central vacuole • Have centrioles

More Related