Anatomy & Physiology Bio 168 Chapter 3
Phagocytosis
"Cell eating"
Autolysis
"cell suicide": digestion of a surplus cell by itself
Chemical first messenger
(epinephrine) binds to a surface recepto
Chromatin
(thread-like) composed of DNA and protein
aquaporins
- water channel proteins
One osmole (osm)
1 mole of dissolved particles
Cell theory
1) All living things made of cells
Human cell size
10-15um in diamete
Membrane proteins
2% of the molecules but 50% of the weight of membrane
Cholesterol
20% of the membrane lipids Holds phospholipids still and can stiffen membrane
Glycocalyx
A fuzzy sticky carbohydrate rich area at the cell surface unique to everyone except identical twins
Osmolarity
A measure of the total solute concentration per liter of solution
Phospholipids
A molecule that is a constituent of the inner bilayer of biological membranes, having a polar, hydrophilic head and a nonpolar, hydrophobic tail.
Cytoskeleton
A network of fibers that holds the cell together, helps the cell to keep its shape, and aids in movement
selectively permeable
A property of cell membranes that allows some substances to pass through, while others cannot
Organelles
A tiny cell structure that carries out a specific function within the cell.
Kinases
Add a phosphate group to a molecule
Glycolipids
Are complexes of carbohydrates and lipids 5% of the membrane lipids
Peripheral proteins
Are proteins that are attached to the surface of the membrane. does not penetrate tethered to the cytoskeleton
Plasma membrane
Boundary of cell. Holds things together and controls entry and exit of substances.
Secondary active transport
Carrier moves solute through membrane but only uses ATP indirectly
antiport
Carries two or more solutes in opposite directions
symport
Carries two or more solutes through a membrane simultaneously in the same direction.
Pinocytosis
Cell drinking
Cytoplasm
Consists of organelles, cytoskeleton, and cytosol
Nucleus
Control center of the cell largest organelle (5 m in diameter)
Nonmembranous organelles
Cytoskeleton, centrioles, ribosomes
Exocytosis
Expulsion or secretion of materials from a cell. Replacement of plasma membrane removed by endocytosis
Three mechanisms of carrier-mediated transport
Facilitated diffusion, primary active transport, secondary active transport
cilia
Hairlike projections that extend from the plasma membrane and are used for locomotion
transport proteins
Lets things in and out of cells passively or actively.
Na+−K+ pump functions
Maintains steep Na+ concentration gradient allowing for secondary active transport Regulates solute concentration and thus osmosis and thus cell volume Maintains negatively charged resting membrane potential Produces heat
The Cytoskeleton is composed of
Microtubles, intermediate filaments, microfilaments
Receptor-mediated endocytosis
More selective endocytosis Enables cells to take in specific molecules that bind to extracellular receptors
Membranous Organelles
Nucleus, ER, golgi, lysosomes, peroxisomes, and mitochondria
Basic components of a cell
Plasma, Cytoplasm, Extracellular fluid
Exocytosis
Process by which a cell releases large amounts of material.
Glycocalyx Functions
Protection - Cell adhesion Immunity to infection Fertilization Defense against cancer -Embryonic development Transplant compatibility
Functions of membrane proteins include:
Receptors, second-messenger systems, enzymes, channels, carriers, cell-identity markers, cell-adhesion molecules
Golgi vesicles
Some vesicles become lysosomes Some vesicles migrate to plasma membrane and fuse to it Some become secretory vesicles that store a protein product for later release
Plasma Cell
Surrounds cell, defines boundaries Made of proteins and lipids
Flagella
Tail of a sperm—only functional flagellum in humans
Axoneme
The core of motile cilia, usually in a "9 + 2" array, at the center of a cilium or flagellum.
Extracellular fluid (ECF
The fluid outside the body's cells includes tissue
Inclusions
Two kinds of inclusions Stored cellular products Glycogen granules, pigments, and fat droplets Foreign bodies Viruses, intracellular bacteria, dust particles, and other debris phagocytized by a cell
Clathrin-coated vesicle in cytoplasm
Uptake of LDL from bloodstream
Centriole
a short cylindrical assembly of microtubules arranged in nine groups of three microtubules each
Golgi complex
a system of cisternae that synthesizes carbohydrates and puts finishing touches on protein synthesis
Tonicity
ability of a surrounding solution (bath) to affect fluid volume and pressure in a cell
Channel proteins
allow hydrophilic solutes and water to pass through membrane some are always open, some are gated
Limit on cell size
an overly large cell cannot support itself, may rupture For a given increase in diameter, volume increases more than surface area
Receptors
bind chemical signals
Carriers
bind solutes and transfer them across membrane
Facilitated diffusion
carrier moves solute down its concentration gradient
Primary active transport
carrier moves solute through a membrane up its concentration gradient
uniport
carries only one solute at a time
Enzymes
catalyze reactions including digestion of molecules, production of second messengers
Hypotonic solution
causes cell to lose water and shrivel (crenate)
Isotonic solution
causes no change in cell volume
Second messenger systems
communicate within cell receiving chemical message
Pseudopods
continually changing extensions of the cell that vary in shape and size
Autophagy
digestion of cell's surplus organelles
Ciliopathies
diseases that result from defects in cilia
Nuclear envelope
double membrane around nucleus
Evolution of Mitochondrion
evolved from bacteria that invaded primitive cell but survive
Microvilli
extensions of the plasma membrane. best developed in absorption
cystic fibrosis
fibrosis—hereditary disease in which cells make chloride pumps, but fail to install them in the plasma membrane
Cell-identity markers
glycoproteins acting as identification tags
Proteosomes
hollow, cylindrical organelle that disposes of surplus proteins
Osmotic pressure
hydrostatic pressure required to stop osmosis
Transmission electron microscope (TEM)
improved resolution (ability to reveal detail)
Scanning electron microscope (SEM)
improved resolution further, but only for surface features
98% of membrane molecules are
lipids
Nucleoli
masses where ribosomes are produced
Nucleoplasm
material in nucleus
Cell-adhesion molecules
mechanically link cell to extracellular material
Receptor-mediated endocytosis
moves it into the cell and exocytosis moves it out the other side
Vesicular transport
moves large particles, fluid droplets, or numerous molecules at once through the membrane in vesicles—bubble-like enclosures of membrane
Osmosis
net flow of water through a selectively permeable membrane
Simple diffusion
net movement of particles from place of high concentration to place of lower concentration
Nuclear envelope is supported by
nuclear lamina
Motile cilia
occur in respiratory tract, fallopian tubes, internal cavities of the brain, and testes. power stroke and recovery stroke
Mitochondria
organelles specialized for synthesizing ATP Continually change shape from spheroidal to thread-like
Reverse osmosis
osmosis—process of applying mechanical pressure to override osmotic pressure Allows purification of water
Lysosomes
package of enzymes bound by a membrane Generally round, but variable in shape
Rough endoplasmic reticulum
parallel, flattened sacs covered with ribosomes
Filtration
particles are driven through membrane by physical pressure
Receptor-mediated endocytosis
particles bind to specific receptors on plasma membrane
Integral proteins
penetrate the hydrophobic core of the lipid bilayer, often completely spanning the membrane (as transmembrane proteins).
G protein
relays signal to adenylate cyclase which converts ATP to cAMP (second messenger) cAMP activates cytoplasmic kinases
Active mechanisms
require energy, consume energy. These include active transport and vesicular support
Passive mechanisms
require no ATP, includes filtration, diffusion, and osmosis
Peroxisomes
resembles lysosomes but contain different enzymes and are produced by endoplasmic reticulum Function is to use molecular oxygen to oxidize organic molecules In all cells, but abundant in liver and kidney
Voltage-gated channels
respond to charge changes
Ligand-gated channels
respond to chemical messengers
Mechanically-gated channels
respond to physical stress on cell
Light microscope (LM)
revealed plasma membrane, nucleus, and cytoplasm (fluid between nucleus and surface)
Cytology
scientific study of cells
centrosome
small clear area in cell Play important role in cell division
Ribosomes
small granules of protein and RNA Found in nucleoli, in cytosol, and on outer surfaces of rough ER, and nuclear envelope
Endoplasmic reticulum
system of channels (cisternae) enclosed by membrane
Factors affecting diffusion rate through a membrane
temperature, space, size of particle
Transcytosis
transport of material across the cell by capturing it on one side and releasing it on the other
Transport maximum
transport rate when all carriers are occupied
Endocytosis
vesicular processes that bring material into cell