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The Cell and Homeostasis

The Cell and Homeostasis. Honors Biology Chapter 5. I. NRG. Ability to do work. A. Types of nrg (2). 1. Kinetic – Nrg of motion Transfers motion to other matter ex. Muscles contract and move body parts which in turn moves obejcts. Potential nrg

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The Cell and Homeostasis

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  1. The Cell and Homeostasis Honors Biology Chapter 5

  2. I. NRG • Ability to do work

  3. A. Types of nrg (2) 1. Kinetic – • Nrg of motion • Transfers motion to other matter ex. Muscles contract and move body parts which in turn moves obejcts

  4. Potential nrg Stored nrg object has due to location or structure Ex. Nrg stored in chemical bonds, when broken releases power to do work

  5. II. Chemical Reactions and nrg • Chemical rx either store or release nrg Types of chemical rx: A. Endergonic rx = nrg in nrg absorbed from environment as rx occurs so product stores nrg within bonds Ex. photosynthesis

  6. B. Exergonic rx = nrg out chemical reactions that release nrg Ex. Wood burning, cellular respiration

  7. Ex. Of both types of reactions: combination of endergonic and exergonic reaction is one that stores and releases nrg to be used by all living organisms Ex. We eat food – it gets broken down chemically = what is not used is stored to be used later

  8. III. Work Work = rearrangement of matter (need nrg to do this sometimes) 3 types of work A. chemical B. mechanical C. transportation

  9. A. Chemical work Chemical nrg – nrg for cell activity need ATP to do this Structure of ATP Adenine + ribose + 3 phosphates Adenine + ribose = adenosine

  10. ATP High energy bonds when broken release a lot of nrg Process of breaking bonds of ATP = Dephosphorylation Dephosphorylation = exergonic reaction used by cells to get nrg need

  11. Phosphorylation – “popping P back on” Endergonic reaction used to store nrg not used by the body at the time

  12. B. Mechanical Work Mechanical work – • transfer phosphate to a protein in muscle which will cause muscle to contract • contraction is the mechanical work done by using the chemical nrg

  13. c. Transport work Transport work: • Phosphate (of ATP) attaches to protein on cell membrane used to transport molecules across the cell membrane

  14. IV. Enzymes Enzyme- • protein that catalyzes a chemical reaction without being changed itself • Doesn’t add nrg to reaction, it speeds it up by lowering the amount of nrg needed to start the reaction (activation nrg) • Nrg absorbed to weaken bonds so they break

  15. B. Enzyme specificity • Remember each protein has it’s own shape and that shape determines which chemical reaction the enzyme will catalyze

  16. C. Steps of catalyzing (Induced Fit model) Steps: (this should be a review for you) • Substrate binds to enzyme at active site • Substrate – molecule enzyme is acting on • Active site – region where substrate fits into enzyme

  17. Active site changes shape to hold onto substrate better (creates induced fit) • The induced fit weakens bonds • Substrate converted to new products • products released

  18. d. Cell environment can effect enzyme 4 things can effect activity of enzyme within cell • Temperature of cell – higher temp. destroy enzymes by altering shape (denaturing)

  19. b. pH - most enzymes function between 6-8 pH if not in this range it denatures • Salt concentration – salt ions interfere with some chemical bonds that maintain shape of enzymes. d. Coenzymes / cofactors coenzymes = organic molecules that help the enzyme Cofactors = inorganic molecules that help the enzyme

  20. E. Enzyme Inhibitors Enzyme inhibitors interfere with enzymes activities by attaching to the enzyme and preventing it from working. Toxins, poisons, and pesticides all do this Ex. Cyanide – stops production of ATP by inhibiting the enzyme that produces ATP Ex. Ibuprofen / aspirin- interfere with enymes that induce pain

  21. 2 types of enzyme inhibitors • Competitive – fits into active site and blocks substrate, so enzyme doesn’t work • Noncompetitive – binds to enzyme at place other then active site and changes shape of the enzyme so it doesn’t work

  22. V. Molecular Transportation • Cell membrane is a bilayer of phospholipids with protein, carbohydrates and cholesterol • It is selectively permeable, therefore not everything can enter or exit the cell • Semi permeability helps maintain homeostasis of the cell

  23. Factors determine cell membrane transportation • Size • Shape • solubility

  24. a. 2 types of Membrane Transportation • A. Passive • B. Active

  25. A. Passive Transportation • Diffusion • Osmosis • Facilitated Diffusion • Ion channels

  26. 1. Diffusion • Movement of molecules from an area of high to low concentration • Depends on concentration gradient • Moves down gradient

  27. Concentration gradient • http://www.indiana.edu/~phys215/lecture/lecnotes/lecgraphics/diffusion.gif

  28. 2. Facilitated Diffusion • Protein carrier • High to low • Steps: • Molecule binds to specific protein • Protein changes shape • Carrier releases molecule • Returns back to original shape

  29. 3. Osmosis • Diffusion of WATER ONLY from an area of high to low concenration • Depends on concentration of solutes on both sides of membrane

  30. 3 ways water moves • Hypertonic solution- more solutes outside the cell membrane - water diffuses out of cell and cell shrinks • Hypotonic solution- less solutes outside the cell membrane - water diffuses into cell and the cell explodes • Isotonic solution- same solutes outside as inside the cell - equal water movement

  31. 4. Ion Channels • Integral proteins • Passageway because insoluble to membrane • Specific ion channels for each ion • Some gated - some open all time • Gates respond to different signals - electrical, chemical, cell membrane stretching

  32. B. Active Transportation • Nrg • Against concentration gradient

  33. Types of Active Transportation 1. Pumps 2. Vesicular

  34. 1. Cell membrane pumps • Carrier protein (integral) • Against concent. Gradient • Steps for Na+/K+ pump) • 3 Na+ inside cell binds to carrier protein • Protein changes shape • Na+ released outside cell • 2 K+ picked up outside cell • Protein changes shape • 2 K released inside cell • (3Na+ out - 2 K+ inside)

  35. Na+ / K+ pump

  36. Na+ / K+ pump • Maintains electrochemical gradient (outside cell membrane more positive compared to inside) • Maintains neg. charge inside the cell • This allows cell to function properly • If too positive inside, muscles won’t contract, neurons won’t fire, etc… • This is homeostasis for inside of cell

  37. Vesicular Transportation • Exocytosis • Endocytosis

  38. 2. Exocytosis • Exo = out • Cytosis = cell • Exocytosis = to bring materials out of the cell

  39. Process of exocytosis • Vessicle merges with cell membrane • Cell membrane opens and contents are released • Ex. Protein made on RER sent to golgi where it is modified packaged and shipped to cell membrane, vesicle fuses with membrane and vesicle releases to go to other cells

  40. 3. Endocytosis • Endo = into • Cytosis = cell • Movement of molecules INTO the cell

  41. Process of endocytosis • Molecules engulfed by the cell membrane • Form a vesicle around the macromolecule • Vesicle pinched off inside cell • Lysosome breaks down and releases contents into cell

  42. Types of Endocytosis a. Pinocytosis • To bring water into the cell b. Phagocytosis • To bring solids into the cell • Receptor mediated - plasma membrane indents where receptors activated and create vesicle which is brought into the cell

  43. Videos • Check on my wiki site for videos to watch regarding cell transportation

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