1 / 45

3.1 The Cellular Level of Organization

3.1 The Cellular Level of Organization. All life is “cellular” Unicellular organisms like Archaea, Bacteria, protists Multicellular eukaryotes like fungi, plants, and animals Exceptions: Viruses are ‘acellular’ but exhibit life qualities when acting as a parasite within host cells.

dareh
Download Presentation

3.1 The Cellular Level of Organization

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. 3.1 The Cellular Level of Organization • All life is “cellular” • Unicellular organisms like Archaea, Bacteria, protists • Multicellular eukaryotes like fungi, plants, and animals • Exceptions: Viruses are ‘acellular’ but exhibit life qualities when acting as a parasite within host cells

  2. 3.1 The Cellular Level of Organization • The cell is the structural and functional unit of an organism, the smallest structure capable of performing all the functions necessary for life.

  3. 3.1 The Cellular Level of Organization • Prokaryotic cells lack membrane enclosed structures. No nucleus or “organelle” compartments • Eukaryotic cells possess membrane enclosed structures. Prominent nucleus and distinct compartments - organelles

  4. The Cell Theory • All organisms are composed of one or more cells. • Robert Hooke, Louis Pasteur, Leuwenhoek, Virchow and others helped form the “cell theory”

  5. The Cell Theory • All organisms are composed of one or more cells. • Cells are the basic living unit of structure and function in organisms.

  6. The Cell Theory • All organisms are composed of one or more cells. • Cells are the basic living unit of structure and function in organisms. • All cells come only from other cells.

  7. Sizes of Living Things

  8. Surface Area / Volume Ratio • The amount of surface area affects the ability to get materials in and out of a cell. • Cells are “small”. Their size is limited. Size is limited by S/V ratio.

  9. Surface Area / Volume Ratio • The amount of surface area affects the ability to get materials in and out of a cell. • A cells increase in volume, the proportionate amount of surface area decreases.

  10. Surface Area / Volume Ratio

  11. Plasma Membrane and Cytoplasm • All cells are surrounded by a plasma membrane (AKA cytoplasmic memb., cell memb.). • The material inside of a cell is the cytoplasm. • The plasma membrane regulates what enters and exits a cell.

  12. 3.2 Prokaryotic Cells • Smaller in size than Eukaryotes (1 – 10 microns) • Unicellular, no nucleus or organelles • Archaea • Bacteria

  13. 3.2 Prokaryotic Cells

  14. 3.2 Prokaryotic Cells • Cell Wall - Unique Polysaccharide, Peptidoglycan • Capsule- Sugar coat • Flagellum - Motor • Nucleoid - DNA • Ribosomes

  15. 3.2 Prokaryotic Cells • Cell Wall • Capsule • Flagellum • Nucleoid • Ribosomes

  16. Prokaryotes are: • Structurally simple • Metabolically diverse • Adapted to most types of environments

  17. 3.2 Prokaryotic Cells

  18. 3.3 Eukaryotic Cells • Larger in size than Prokaryotes (10 to 50 microns) • Membrane bound organelles (compartments with specialized functions)

  19. 3.3 Eukaryotic Cells • Eukaryotic cells: • Are structurally complex • Have a nucleus • Possess membrane-bound organelles • May have a cell wall

  20. 3.3 Eukaryotic Cells

  21. 3.3 Eukaryotic Cells – Review these for assessment test, particularly the animal cell

  22. The Nucleus • Stores DNA

  23. The Nucleus • Stores DNA • Nucleolus - rRNA

  24. The Nucleus • Stores DNA • Nucleolus - rRNA • Nuclear Envelope • Nuclear pores

  25. Ribosomes • Site of protein synthesis • Two subunits (large and small) • Subunits consist of rRNA and protein molecules • Polyribosomes • Several ribosomes with a single mRNA molecule

  26. Endoplasmic Reticulum • Consists of membranous channels and saccules

  27. Endoplasmic Reticulum • Rough ER • Processing and modification of proteins • Smooth ER • Synthesizes phospholipids • Various other functions

  28. Golgi Apparatus • The Golgi apparatus collects, sorts, packages, and distributes materials such as proteins and lipids.

  29. Lysosomes • Lysosomes contain digestive enzymes that break down unwanted, foreign substances or worn- out parts of cells

  30. Vacuoles • Vacuoles are membranous sacs that store substances. • For example: Water Pigments Toxins

  31. Peroxisomes • Membrane bound vesicles containing enzymes. • The enzymes break down molecules and as a result produce hydrogen peroxide. • Toxic oxygen waste products – free radicals, can cause serious problems • Detoxification by special enzymes like SOD to less toxic hydrogen peroxide • Hydrogen peroxide is broken down to water and oxygen by the enzyme catalase

  32. Energy-Related Organelles • Chloroplasts • Mitochondria

  33. Energy-Related Organelles Photosynthesis Cellular Respiration

  34. Chloroplasts • Site of photosynthesis • Structure: • Double-membrane • Stroma • Grana • Thylakoids • Chloroplasts contain: • Their own DNA • Ribosomes • Enzymes

  35. Mitochondria • Found in all eukaryotic cells • Site or cellular respiration • Structure: • Double-membrane • Matrix • Crista

  36. The Cytoskeleton • Maintains cell shape • Assists in movement of cell and organelles • Assemble and disassemble as needed • Three types of macromolecular fibers • Actin Filaments • Intermediate Filaments • Microtubules

  37. Actin Filaments • Anchored to the plasma membrane • Allows intestinal microvilli to expand and contract • Found in pseudopods allowing amoeboid movement • Play a role in animal cell division

  38. Actin Filaments • Actin interacts with motor molecules such as myosin. • In the presence of ATP, myosin pulls actin along • Example: muscle cells

  39. Intermediate Filaments • Intermediate in size between actin filaments and microtubules • Functions: • Support nuclear envelope • Cell-cell junctions, such as those holding skin cells tightly together

  40. Microtubules • Hollow cylinders made of two globular proteins • Assembly: • Under control of Microtubule Organizing Center (MTOC) • Most important MTOC is centrosome • Interacts with specific proteins to cause movement of organelles

  41. Microtubule Operation

  42. Centrioles • Short cylinders with a 9 + 0 pattern of microtubule triplets

  43. Centrioles • Help organize microtubules during animal cell division • May be involved with microtubule formation and in the organization of cilia and flagella

  44. Cilia and Flagella • Hairlike projections that aid in cell movement • In eukaryotic cells, cilia are much shorter than flagella • They are membrane-bound cylinders enclosing a matrix area • The matrix consists of microtubules in a 9 + 2 pattern

  45. Cilia and Flagella

More Related