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Chapter 7 Cell Structure and Function 1

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Chapter 7 Cell Structure and Function 1

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Hamza Alassaf
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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• Campbell Biology

• Eleventh Edition

• Chapter 7
Cell structure and function

1
 Cell is the basic unit of structure and function
Cells are microscopic

Types of microscopes:
1) Light
2) Electron

Types of cells
1) Prokaryotic
2) Eukaryotic
Cell
Fractionation

3
Eukaryotic cells have internal membranes that compartmentalize
their functions

 The basic structural and functional unit of every organism is one of two
types of cells: prokaryotic or eukaryotic

 Only organisms of the domains Bacteria and Archaea consist of


prokaryotic cells

 Protists, fungi, animals, and plants all consist of eukaryotic cells

4
Basic features of all cells

 Plasma membrane

 Semifluid substance called cytosol

 Chromosomes (carry genes)

 Ribosomes (make proteins)

5
Prokaryotic cells are characterized by having

 No nucleus

 DNA in an unbound region called the nucleoid

 No membrane-bound organelles

 Cytoplasm bound by the plasma membrane

6
Prokaryotic cell

7
8
Eukaryotic cells are characterized by having

 DNA in a nucleus that is bounded by a membranous nuclear


envelope

 Membrane-bound organelles

 Cytoplasm in the region between the plasma membrane and


nucleus

 Eukaryotic cells are generally much larger than prokaryotic cells

9
The plasma membrane is a selective barrier that allows sufficient passage
of oxygen, nutrients, and waste to service the volume of every cell

The general structure of a biological membrane is a double layer of


phospholipids
Carbohydrate side chains

Hydrophilic
region

Hydrophobic
region
Hydrophilic Phospholipid Proteins
region
Structure of the plasma membrane
10
 Metabolic requirements set upper limits on the size of cells

 The surface area to volume ratio of a cell is critical

 As the surface area increases by a factor of n2, the volume increases by a


factor of n3

 Small cells have a greater surface area relative to volume

11
 The cell is compartmentalized (Compartments = Organelles)
 Each organelle has specific structure and function
 Cell size is affected by two factors: 1. Surface area 2. Volume
 Smaller cell size, more efficient in working and better functioning

 Examples:
1) Intestine and the microvilli
2) Lungs and the alveoli

12
Surface area increases while
total volume remains constant

5
1
1

Total surface area


[sum of the surface areas
(height  width) of all box 6 150 750
sides  number of boxes]

Total volume
[height  width  length
 number of boxes] 1 125 125

Surface-to-volume
(S-to-V) ratio
[surface area  volume] 6 1.2 6
 A eukaryotic cell has internal membranes that partition the cell into
organelles

 Plant and animal cells have most of the same organelles

14
Animal cell

15
Plant cell

16
Organelles & Cytoskeleton of the cell

Nucleus & Nucleolus


Ribosomes
Endoplasmic reticulum (Smooth & Rough)
Golgi apparatus
Lysosomes
Vacuoles
Mitochondria
Chloroplast
Peroxisomes
Cytoskeleton

17
The eukaryotic cell’s genetic instructions are
housed in the nucleus and carried out by the
ribosomes

The nucleus contains most of the DNA in a eukaryotic cell

Ribosomes use the information from the DNA to make proteins

18
The Nucleus: Information Central

The nucleus contains most of the cell’s genes and is usually the most
conspicuous organelle

The nuclear envelope encloses the nucleus, separating it from the cytoplasm

The nuclear membrane is a double membrane; each membrane consists of a


lipid bilayer

19
Nucleus & Nucleolus

 The eukaryotic cell’s genetic instructions are housed in the


nucleus and carried out by the ribosomes

The nucleus contains most of the DNA in a eukaryotic cell

Ribosomes use the information from the DNA to make proteins

20
The nucleus contains most of the cell’s genes and is usually the most
conspicuous organelle

The nuclear envelope encloses the nucleus, separating it from the cytoplasm

The nuclear membrane is a double membrane; each membrane consists of a


lipid bilayer

21
Pores regulate the entry and exit of molecules from the nucleus

The shape of the nucleus is maintained by the nuclear lamina, which is


composed of protein (Intermediate filaments)

22
In the nucleus, DNA is organized into discrete units called chromosomes

Each chromosome is composed of a single DNA molecule associated with


proteins

The DNA and proteins of chromosomes are together called chromatin

Chromatin condenses to form discrete chromosomes as a cell prepares to


divide

The nucleolus is located within the nucleus and is the site of ribosomal RNA
(rRNA) synthesis
23
Nucleus & Nucleolus

24
25
26
27
28
Phospholipid
bilayer

29
30
31
32
Ribosomes

33
34
Ribosomes are particles made of ribosomal RNA and protein

Ribosomes carry out protein synthesis in two locations


 In the cytosol (free ribosomes)
 On the outside of the endoplasmic reticulum or the nuclear envelope
(bound ribosomes)

35
36
37
The endomembrane system regulates protein traffic
and performs metabolic functions in the cell

Components of the endomembrane system


 Nuclear envelope
 Endoplasmic reticulum
 Golgi apparatus
 Lysosomes
 Vacuoles
 Plasma membrane

These components are either continuous or connected via transfer by vesicles


38
The Endoplasmic Reticulum: Biosynthetic Factory

The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) accounts for more than half of the
total membrane in many eukaryotic cells

The ER membrane is continuous with the nuclear envelope

There are two distinct regions of ER


 Smooth ER, which lacks ribosomes
 Rough ER, surface is studded with ribosomes

39
Functions of Smooth ER

The smooth ER

 Synthesizes lipids
 Metabolizes carbohydrates
 Detoxifies drugs and poisons
 Stores calcium ions

40
Functions of Rough ER

 The rough ER

 Has bound ribosomes, which secrete glycoproteins (proteins covalently


bonded to carbohydrates)
 Distributes transport vesicles, proteins surrounded by membranes
 Is a membrane factory for the cell

41
Endoplasmic Reticulum (Rough & Smooth)

42
The Golgi Apparatus: Shipping and Receiving Center

The Golgi apparatus consists of flattened membranous sacs called cisternae

Functions of the Golgi apparatus


 Modifies products of the ER
 Manufactures certain macromolecules
 Sorts and packages materials into transport vesicles

43
Golgi apparatus

44
45
46
47
Lysosomes: Digestive Compartments

A lysosome is a membranous sac of hydrolytic enzymes that can digest


macromolecules
Lysosomal enzymes can hydrolyze proteins, fats, polysaccharides, and
nucleic acids
Lysosomal enzymes work best in the acidic environment inside the
lysosome

48
Some types of cell can engulf another cell by phagocytosis; this forms a
food vacuole

A lysosome fuses with the food vacuole and digests the molecules

Lysosomes also use enzymes to recycle the cell’s own organelles and
macromolecules, a process called autophagy

49
Lysosomes

50
51
Vacuoles: Diverse Maintenance Compartments

 A plant cell or fungal cell may have one or several vacuoles, derived
from endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus

• Food vacuoles are formed by phagocytosis


• Contractile vacuoles, found in many freshwater protists, pump excess
water out of cells
• Central vacuoles, found in many mature plant cells, hold organic
compounds and water

52
53
Vacuoles

 Types of vacuoles

1. Food
2. Contractile
3. Central

54
55
The Endomembrane System: A Review

• The endomembrane system is a complex and dynamic player in the


cell’s compartmental organization

56
57
58
59
Mitochondria and chloroplasts change energy from one
form to another

• Mitochondria are the sites of cellular respiration, a metabolic process that


uses oxygen to generate ATP
• Chloroplasts, found in plants and algae, are the sites of photosynthesis
• Peroxisomes are oxidative organelles

60
Mitochondria: Chemical Energy Conversion

 Mitochondria are in nearly all eukaryotic cells


 They have a smooth outer membrane and an inner membrane folded
into cristae
 The inner membrane creates two compartments: intermembrane space
and mitochondrial matrix
 Some metabolic steps of cellular respiration are catalyzed in the
mitochondrial matrix
 Cristae present a large surface area for enzymes that synthesize ATP

61
Mitochondria

62
63
64
Chloroplasts: Capture of Light Energy

• Chloroplasts contain the green pigment chlorophyll, as well as


enzymes and other molecules that function in photosynthesis
• Chloroplasts are found in leaves and other green organs of plants and
in algae
• Chloroplast structure includes
– Thylakoids, membranous sacs, stacked to form a granum
– Stroma, the internal fluid
• The chloroplast is one of a group of plant organelles, called plastids

65
Chloroplast

66
The Evolutionary Origins of Mitochondria and Chloroplasts
• Mitochondria and chloroplasts have similarities with bacteria
 Enveloped by a double membrane
 Contain free ribosomes and circular DNA molecules
 Grow and reproduce somewhat independently in cells
• The Endosymbiont theory
 An early ancestor of eukaryotic cells engulfed a non-photosynthetic
prokaryotic cell, which formed an endosymbiont relationship with its host
 The host cell and endosymbiont merged into a single organism, a eukaryotic
cell with a mitochondrion
 At least one of these cells may have taken up a photosynthetic prokaryote,
becoming the ancestor of cells that contain chloroplasts
67
Endosymbiont Theory

68
Peroxisomes: Oxidation

• Peroxisomes are specialized metabolic compartments bounded by a single


membrane
• Peroxisomes produce hydrogen peroxide and convert it to water
• Peroxisomes perform reactions with many different functions
• How peroxisomes are related to other organelles is still unknown

69
 Peroxisomes as in liver cells, contain enzymes that remove hydrogen atoms
from alcohol & other poisonous harmful compounds (detoxification) by
transferring them to oxygen (O2), producing H2O2 (hydrogen peroxide) as a by-
product.

 H2O2 (hydrogen peroxide) is toxic itself, peroxisomes contain also catalase


enzymes that convert H2O2 to H2O and O2

 Peroxisomes contain both enzymes that make H2O2 & others that convert H2O2
to water

 Glyoxysomes ( specialized peroxisomes) are found in fat storing tissues of plant


seeds. These organelles contain enzymes that initiates the conversion of fatty
acids to sugars.

 Sugars are used for growing seedlings and is used also as fuel for cellular
respiration. 70
 Peroxisomes grow larger (increase in size) & increase in number by
splitting in two when reach certain size

The increase in size is due to protein incorporation made in cytosol and


endoplasmic reticulum, as well as lipids made in endoplasmic
reticulum and within the peroxisome itself.

71
Peroxisomes

72
Cytoskeleton
 Cytoskeleton is a network of fibers extending throughout the cytoplasm

 Types of cytoskeleton:
1) Microtubules
2) Microfilaments
3) Intermediate filaments

 Functions of cytoskeleton
1) Mechanical support
2) Anchorage for organelles
3) Change the shape of the cell
4) Cell motility

73
Components of the Cytoskeleton

• Three main types of fibers make up the cytoskeleton


 Microtubules are the thickest of the three components of the
cytoskeleton
 Microfilaments, also called actin filaments, are the thinnest
components
 Intermediate filaments are fibers with diameters in a middle
range

74
Microtubules

75
Microtubules

• Microtubules are hollow rods about 25 nm in diameter and about 200 nm


to 25 microns long
• Functions of microtubules
1) Shaping the cell
2) Guiding movement of organelles
3) Separating chromosomes during cell division

76
Centrosomes and Centrioles
 In many cells, microtubules grow out from a centrosome near the nucleus
 The centrosome is a “microtubule-organizing center”
 In animal cells, the centrosome has a pair of centrioles, each with nine
triplets of microtubules arranged in a ring

Chromosome movements in cell division


77
Cilia and Flagella
• Microtubules control the beating of cilia and flagella, locomotor appendages
of some cells
• Cilia and flagella differ in their beating patterns

 Beating of flagella and Cilia

78
• Cilia and flagella share a common structure
– A core of microtubules sheathed by the plasma membrane
– A basal body that anchors the cilium or flagellum
– A motor protein called dynein, which drives the bending movements of a
cilium or flagellum

79
Structure of flagellum or motile cilium

80
Structure of flagellum or motile cilium

81
Microfilaments

82
Microfilaments (Actin Filaments)

• Microfilaments are solid rods about 7 nm in diameter, built as a twisted


double chain of actin subunits
• The structural role of microfilaments is to bear tension, resisting pulling
forces within the cell
• They form a 3-D network called the cortex just inside the plasma
membrane to help support the cell’s shape
• Bundles of microfilaments make up the core of microvilli of intestinal
cells

83
• Microfilaments that function in cellular motility contain the protein
myosin in addition to actin
• In muscle cells, thousands of actin filaments are arranged parallel to one
another
• Thicker filaments composed of myosin interdigitate with the thinner actin
fibers

84
• Localized contraction brought about by actin and myosin also drives
amoeboid movement
• Pseudopodia (cellular extensions) extend and contract through the
reversible assembly and contraction of actin subunits into microfilaments

85
• Cytoplasmic streaming is a circular flow of cytoplasm within cells
• This streaming speeds distribution of materials within the cell
• In plant cells, actin-myosin interactions and sol-gel transformations
drive cytoplasmic streaming

86
Intermediate filaments

87
Intermediate Filaments
• Intermediate filaments range in diameter from 8–12 nanometers, larger
than microfilaments but smaller than microtubules
• They support cell shape and fix organelles in place
• Intermediate filaments are more permanent cytoskeleton fixtures than the
other two classes

88
 Anchorage of certain organelles

 Formation of nuclear lamina


 Anchorage of nucleus

89
Extracellular components and connections between cells
help coordinate cellular activities

• Most cells synthesize and secrete materials that are external to the plasma
membrane
• These extracellular structures include
 Cell walls of plants
 The extracellular matrix (ECM) of animal cells
 Intercellular junctions

90
Cell Walls of Plants

• The cell wall is an extracellular structure that distinguishes plant cells from
animal cells
• Prokaryotes, fungi, and some protists also have cell walls
• The cell wall protects the plant cell, maintains its shape, and prevents
excessive uptake of water
• Plant cell walls are made of cellulose fibers embedded in other
polysaccharides and protein

91
• Plant cell walls may have multiple layers
– Primary cell wall: relatively thin and flexible
– Middle lamella: thin layer between primary walls of adjacent cells
– Secondary cell wall (in some cells): added between the plasma
membrane and the primary cell wall
• Plasmodesmata are channels between adjacent plant cells

92
Extracellular components and connections between
cells help coordinate cellular activities

93
The Extracellular Matrix (ECM) of Animal Cells

• Animal cells lack cell walls but are covered by an elaborate


extracellular matrix (ECM)
• The ECM is made up of glycoproteins such as collagen,
proteoglycans, and fibronectin
• ECM proteins bind to receptor proteins in the plasma membrane
called integrins

94
The Extracellular Matrix (ECM) of Animal Cells

95
96
• Functions of the ECM
 Support
 Adhesion
 Movement
 Regulation

97
Cell Junctions

Neighboring cells in tissues, organs, or organ systems often adhere,


interact, and communicate through direct physical contact

• There are several types of intercellular junctions

Types of intercellular junctions

 Plasmodesmata (plant cell)


 Tight junctions (Animal cell)
 Desmosomes (Animal cell)
 Gap junctions (Animal cell)

98
Plasmodesmata in Plant Cells

• Plasmodesmata are channels that perforate plant cell walls


• Through Plasmodesmata, water and small solutes (and sometimes
proteins and RNA) can pass from cell to cell

99
 Plasmodesmata

100
Tight Junctions, Desmosomes, and Gap Junctions in
Animal Cells
• At tight junctions, membranes of neighboring cells are pressed together,
preventing leakage of extracellular fluid
• Desmosomes (anchoring junctions) fasten cells together into strong sheets
• Gap junctions (communicating junctions) provide cytoplasmic channels
between adjacent cells

Desmosomes Gap Junctions101


Tight Junctions
 Tight junctions

 Desmosomes

 Gap junctions

102
103

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