MCAt cell biology 1
Binary fission
A replication process for prokaryotes, also used by mitochondria
Catalysts
Substances that reduce the activation energy of a chemical reaction.
Centrioles
A set of cylinder shaped structures, that are copied during Interphase, used during Mitosis to anchor Spindle Fibers.
Cellular Respiration
- most efficient catabolic pathway to harvest energy stored in glucose - occurs in mitochondrion and catalyzed by reaction specific enzymes - produces 36-38 ATP - aerobic, O₂ acts as the final acceptor of electrons that are passed from carrier to carrier during the final stage of glucose oxidation - three stages: pyruvate decarboxylation, citric acid cycle and electron transport chain
Autolysis
"Cell suicide" by rupturing of lysosome membranes
Carrier Coenzymes
- NAD⁺, FAD, NADP⁺ - transport the high energy electrons of the hydrogen atoms to a series of carrier moelcules on the inner mitochondrial membrane (electron transport chain)
Cell Division
- a process where a cell doubles its organelles and cytoplasm, replicates its DNA and then divides in two - unicellular organism: reproduction - multicellular organism: growth, development & replace old cells
Binary Fission
- a simple form of asexual reproduction in prokaryotes - circular chromosome replicates - a new plasma membrane and cell wall grow inward along the midline of the cell, dividing it into two - each daughter cell contains a duplicate of the parent chromosome
ADP
- adenosine diphosphate - Pi: inorganic phosphate - ATP --> ADP + Pi + 7 kcal/mole - the 7 kcal/mole provides energy for endergonic/endothermic reactions like muscle contraction, motility and active transport across plasma membranes
AMP
- adenosine monophosphate - PPi: phyrophosphate - ATP --> AMP + PPi + 7 kcal/mole
ATP
- adenosine triphosphate - cell
Allosteric Effects
- allosteric enzyme oscillates between two configuration (active site that can catalyze a reaction and inactive site that can
Active site
- an area on each enzyme to which the substrate bonds to form an enzyme-substrate complex - has a three dimensional shape into which the substrate fits and held at a particular orientation
Apoenzyme
- an enzyme devoid of its necessary cofactor - catalytically inactive
Acrosome
- cap-like structure, over the anterior half of mature spermss head - derived from Golgi apparatus - contains enzymes to penetrate the tough outer covering of the ovum - once in contact with ovum cell membrane, sperm forms a tubelike structure called the acrosomal process - acrosomal process extends and fuses with ovum and enters the ovum
Autoradiography Preparation
- cells are exposed to a radioactive compound for a brief, measured period of time - cells are incubated, fixed at various intervals and processed for microscopy - each preparation is covered with a film of photographic emulsion - preparations must be kept in the dark for several days while radioactive compound decays - the emulsion is then developed - dark silver grains reveal the distribution of radioactivity within the specimen
Carbohydrates
- disaccharides are hydrolyzed into monosaccharides - then converted into glucose or glycolytic intermediates - glycogen in the liver can be converted into glucose 6-phosphate, a glycolytic intermediate
Anaphase I
- disjunction: homologous pairs separate and are pulled to opposite poles of the cell - distribution of homologous chromosomes to intermediate daughter cells are random
Asexual Reproduction
- essentially genetic carbon copies of parent cells - identical to parent cells except for random mutations - different types: binary fission, budding, regeneration, parthenogenesis
Autotrophic
- green plants - convert sunlight into bond energy stored in the bonds of organic compounds (glucose) in the anabolic process of photosythesis - don
Adenine
A nitrogen base that makes up the "rungs" of the DNA ladder;Pairs with Thymine
Capsid
A protein sheath that surrounds the nucleic acid core in a virus
Active Transport
- net movement of dissolved particles against their concentration gradient - need help from transport proteins - requires energy - required to maintain membrane potentials in specialized cells (ex: neurons) - types of molecules transported: polar molecules/ions (Na+, Cl-, K+, etc)
Alcohol Fermentation
- occurs in yeast and bacteria only - pyruvate produced in glycolysis is decarboxylated to acetaldehyde, then reduced by NADH in step 5 of glycolysis to yield ethanol - pyruvate --> acetaldehyde --> ethanol
Binary Fission
- prokaryotesway of of cell division - a type of asexual reproduction - splits into two equal halves, each daughter cell receives a complete copy of the original chromosome
Budding
- replication of the nucleus followed by unequal cytokinesis - the cell membrane pinches inward to form a new cell that is smaller in size but genetically identical to the parent cell - can grow to an adult size - new cell may separate immediately from the parent or remain attached to it - occurs in hydra and yeast
Anaphase II
- sister chromatids are pulled to opposite poles by the spindle fibers
Anaphase
- sister chromatids separate - telomeres are the last part of the chromatids to separate
Centrioles
- specialized type of microtubule involved in spindle organization during cell division - not bound by a membrane - only on animal cells - oriented at right angles to each other and lie in a region called the centrosome - direct separation of chromosomes during cell division - composed of microtubules
Cellular Metabolism
- the sum total of all chemical reactions that take place in a cell - either anabolic (require energy) or catabolic (release energy)
ATP Generation and the Proton Pump
- there are energy losses as electrons are transferred from one complex to the next, this energy is then used to synthesize 1 ATP per complex - since we have 3 complexes, we generate 3 ATP - NADH delivers its electrons to NADH dehydrogenase complex, so for each NADH = 3 ATP - FADH₂ bypasses the NADH dehydrogenase complex and delivers directly to carrier Q (ubiquinone), which is between complex 1 and 2, so each FADH₂ = 2 ATP
Cell Wall
- tough outer cell wall - protects the cell from external stimuli and desiccation - only on plant cells
Centrifugation
- used to separate cells or mixtures of cells without destroying them in process - lower speed: cell mixtures separate into layers on the basis of cell type - high speed: fragmented cells
Autoradiography
- uses radioactive molecules to trace and identify cell structures and biochemical activity - can be used to study protein synthesis - similar techniques are used to study mechanisms of DNA & RNA synthesis
Capsid
- virus
Bacteriophages
- viruses that exclusively infect bacteria - injects its nucleic acid into a bacterial cell, the phage capsid doesnt enter the cell
Alternate Energy Sources
- when glucose supplies run low, the body uses these (in order): carbohydrates, fats and proteins - these are first converted to either glucose or glucose intermediates, which can be degraded in the glycolytic pathway and TCA cycle
Fermentation
/anaerobic process that facilitates the continuation of glycolysis and produces no ATP
Anaphase
Third phase of Mitosis;Centromeres divide which separates the Chromatids, new Chromosomes move to opposite ends of cell, and the cell elongates.
Carrier proteins
Allow larger charged molecules to cross the cell membrane.integral membrane proteins that undergo a conformational change to move a molecule from one side of the membrane to another.
ATP Synthetase
Complex enzyme, in the inner mitochondrial membrane, that permits protons to re-enter the mitochondria and synthesizes ATP using the released energy.
Cell wall
Tough outer layer of a cell made of cellulose, chitin, or other materials
Cell membrane
Encloses the cell; consists of a phospholipid bilayer
cAMP
protein that activate dependent kinases in second messenger cascade that is a universal hunger signal b/c its the second messenger for epi and glucagon
binding of ligand causes GDP to be converted to GTP, which causes the activation of cAMP
Explain G-protein linked receptors.
cell adhesion proteins
proteins that contribute to cell recognition and adhesion.
Autolysis
self-digestion occurring in plant and animal tissues, particularly after they have ceased to function properly
autophagy
self-eating.
centriole
structure that helps to form the spindle
centrioles
structures that are located within the microtubule organizing center and forms microtubules during mitosis to attach to chromosome
alpha amino acid
the amino and carboxyl groups are attached to the same carbon also known as the alpha carbon. Called this because the amine is attached to the carbon in the alpha position.
active transport
the movement of molecules through the plasma membrane against their concentration gradients.
catalase
the primary enzyme in peroxisomes, that catalyzes the hydrolysis of hydrogen peroxide into water and oxygen.
Cell adhesion molecules
Membrane proteins that allow cells to adhere to one another.
cell respiration
the process of using oxygen to release energy from food
cell cycle
the regular sequence of growth and division that cells undergo
Active Site
the specific location where a substrate binds on an enzyme
anaphase
the third phase of mitosis, during which the chromosome pairs separate and move toward opposite poles
Active Transport
Movement of particles from a region of particles against a concentration gradient from low to high, utilizing energy.
'Nucleus
Nucleus /- controls activity of the cell, including division - surrounded by a nuclear membrane/envelope that maintains distinct environment from cytoplasm - nuclear membranes have nuclear pores for two way material exchange - contains DNA - histones: structural proteins that form chromosomes - nucleolus: dense structure in the nucleus where ribosomal RNA (rRNA) synthesis occurstrans-stack /portion of golgi furthest from the ER where vesicles are sent out to destination
anaphase
the third phase of mitosis; replicated chromosomes are split apart at their centromeres and moved to opposite sides of the cell.
Centrioles
One of two tiny structures located in the cytoplasm of animal cells near the nuclear envelope; play a role in cell division.
catalytic receptors
these have an enzymatic active site on the cytoplasmic side of the membrane that is activated when a ligand binds at the extracellular surface.
Cell
Plasma Membrane /- encloses the cell and composed of phospholipid bilayer - outside: hydrophillic (polar) phosphoric acid - inside: hydrophobic (non-polar) fatty acid - selective permeability: small non-polar molecules pass through/diffuse freely, charged ions, proteins & carbohydrates dont (need carrier proteins to cross) - cholesterol molecules: often embedded in hydrophobic interior & contribute to fluidity - receptors: complex proteins glycoproteins embedded in - membrane with biding sites, may carry molecule into the cell via pinocytosis
Cell Cycle
Process that cells go through over and over in which they increase in size and in number that allows an organism to grow bigger.
apoptosis
Programmed cell death.
Cell adhesion molecules (CAMs)
Proteins that contribute to cell reconition and adhesion
Bound ribosomes
Ribosomes found on the endoplasmic reticulum
Centrioles
Specialized type of microtubule used in cell division in animal cells
cell membrane
thin structure that surrounds a cell
acetyl coa
The entry compound for the Krebs cycle in cellular respiration; formed from a fragment of pyruvate attached to a coenzyme.
Cell Plate
Vesicle like material that develops in the middle of two dividing daughter cells that will become two different cell membranes; one for each daughter cell.
Active Transport
transport of a substance (as a protein or drug) across a cell membrane against the concentration gradient
cancer
uncontrolled cell division
Bacteriophages
viruses that infect bacteria
Actin
The primary component of microfilaments
Bacteriophages
Viruses that can only infect bacteria.
asexual reproduction
a reproductive process that involves only one parent and produces offspring that are identical to the parent
centriole
a structure composed of a ring of nine microtuble triplets, found at the MTOC of a cell; they duplicate during cell division, and sere as the organizing center for the mitotic spindle.
amino acid residue
an amino acid in a polypeptide that is not the N or C terminal AA. This refers to every amino acid in a polypeptide chain.
cell surface receptor
an integral membrane protein that binds extracellular signaling molecules, such as hormones and peptides.
cell
basic unit of structure and function in living things
cell cycle
cell grows, prepares to divide, then divides to start growth process again; interphase + M phase
cell differentiation
cells perform different jobs and specialized tasks
9+2 conformation
cilia/flagella cross section has what conformation?
cancer
disorder in which some of the bodys own cells lose the ability to control growth
cell division
division of a parent cell into daughter cells
acid hydrolases
enzymes that degrade various macromolecules and that require an acidic pH to function properly. found within the lysosomes of cells.
cellulose
hard, nonliving material that makes up the cell wall of a plant cell
bacteria
have cell walls , a cell membrane, cytoplasm, ribosomes, and sometimes flagella. Also respiration occurs at the cell emebrane.
active transport
movement of a molecule that requires energy since it is from low to high concentration
cancer
mutation in protein that regulates progression of cell cycle
cell wall
outer, nonliving part of a plant cell
anaphase
phase of mitosis in which sister chromatids are pulled to opposite sides of the cell
cell division
process by which cells reproduce
3 jobs of the cell membrane
protect, give shape, let materials in and out