230 likes | 336 Views
Chapter 3 Review. By: Austin . Basics Concepts. Cells are the building blocks of all plants and animals. Cells are produced by the division of preexisting cells. Cells are the smallest units that perform all vital physiological functions.
E N D
Chapter 3 Review By: Austin
Basics Concepts • Cells are the building blocks of all plants and animals. • Cells are produced by the division of preexisting cells. • Cells are the smallest units that perform all vital physiological functions. • Each cells maintains homeostasis at the cellular level. • Homeostasis at the tissue, organ system, and individual levels reflects on the combined and coordinated actions of many cells.
Studying Cells • Cytology- is the study of the structure and functions of cells.
Cell Anatomy • The cell membrane is what separates the extracellular fluid from the cytosol and cellular organelles. • The extracellular fluid is a watery medium that our cells float in. • The cytosol, which is inside the cell, contain dissolved nutrients, ions, soluble and insoluble proteins, and waste products of the cell. • The organelles are structures that perform specific functions inside the cell.
Cell Membrane • The cell membrane forms the outer boundary of the cell. It is made up of phospholipids, proteins, glycolipids, and cholesterol. • Its functions include physical isolation, regulation of exchange with environment, sensitivity, and structural support.
The cell and its environment • The cell membrane controls all communication with its environment because it has to maintain homeostasis within the cell. • The cell membrane controls osmotic concentration. • The cell membrane controls everything in and out of the cell depending on a cell’s permeability.
Cell Energy • Mitochondria have an outer membrane and an inner membrane that contains many folds called cristae. The cristae increase the area exposed to the matrix, which contain metabolic enzymes that perform reactions that provide energy. • Respiratory enzymes produce ATP through the breakdown of organic molecules in a series of reactions that consume oxygen and generate carbon dioxide.
The Nucleus • The nucleus directs the processes that take place in the cytosol. • Chemical communications between the nucleus and cytosol go through the nuclear pores. • The nucleus controls cellular operations through its regulation of protein synthesis. • The nucleolus synthesize the components of ribosomes. • The nucleoplasm contains ions, enzymes, RNA and DNA nucleotides, proteins, and small amounts of DNA and RNA.
Cell Life Cycle • The first phase is interphase then comes prophase were the two centrioles move to opposite poles. Then the nucleus dissolves in prophase and the chromosomes are lined up during metaphase. In anaphase the chromosomes are pulled apart to opposite poles. Then in telophase the nucleus reappears around the chromatid and cytokinesis begins and two new daughter cells are formed.
Cell Life Cycle Mitosis
Cell Life Cycle Terms • Cell Division • Mitosis • Somatic Cells • Reproductive Cells • Interphase • G-o Phase • G-1 Phase • G-2 Phase • S Phase • DNA Replication • DNA Polymerase • Ligases • G-2 Phase • G-m Phase (Mitosis) • Prophase • Chromatids • Centromere • Spindle Fibers • Metaphase • Metaphase Plate • Anaphase • Daughter chromosomes • Telophase • Cytokinesis • Mitotic Rate • Stem Cell
Transmembrane potential • Transmembrane potential depend on two factors one passive and one active: • The passive factor is the membrane permeability for sodium and potassium. • The active factor is the presence of the sodium-potassium exchange pump in the membrane surface. • The cell membrane regulates what enters and leaves the cell.
Cell Attachment • Cell attachment to one another occur at cell junctions; there are four types of cell junctions gap junctions, tight junctions, intermediate junctions, and desmosomes.
Gap Junctions • Gap junctions is when two cells are held together by an interlocking of membrane proteins. • Gap junctions normally occur in cardiac muscle and smooth muscle tissue and occasionally between nerve cells.
Tight Junctions • In a tight junction there is a partial fusion of the lipid portions of the two cell membranes. • Tight junctions are the strongest intracellular connection. • They provide mechanical strength and block the passage of water and solutes between cells. • Mainly there found where extracellular fluid is different. i.e. digestive tract
Intermediate Junctions • At an intermediate junction the opposing cell membranes are held together by a thick layer of proteoglycans. • This is called intracellular cement; while hyaluronic acid is the most important one. • This adds strength and helps stabilize the shape of the cell.
Desmosomes • Desmosomes contain a very thin proteoglycan layer between the opposing cell membranes, reinforced by filaments that lock the two cells together. • These are very strong and can resist stretching and twisting. • Mainly between the cells in the superficial layers of the skin.