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Microscopes provide windows to the world of the cell. Cellular Diversity. The average adult has nearly 100 trillion cells There are about 200 different types of cells Cells come in a variety of shapes and sizes
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Cellular Diversity The average adult has nearly 100 trillion cells There are about 200 different types of cells Cells come in a variety of shapes and sizes Cellular diversity permits organization of cells into more complex tissues and organs
History of the Microscope • 1665, Robert Hooke described cells using a light microscope • Magnification vs resolution • Highest magnification of l.m. = 1000x • 1950, Electron microscope allowed researchers to clearly identify organelles • There are 2 types: • Transmission • Scanning
Transmission Electron Microscope(TEM) • e- transmitted through specimen are focused • image magnified by electromagnetic lenses to bend trajectories of charged e- • Used to study internal cell structure • Image is focused onto a viewing screen/film
Scanning Electron Microscope(SEM) • e- beam scans surface of specimen that is coated with a thin film of gold • Beam excites secondary e- on sample’s surface • Secondary e- are collected & focused on viewing screen • Useful for studying surface of specimen • SEM has great depth of field & produces 3D image
Disadvantages of Electron microscopes • Can usually only view dead cells because of the elaborate preparation required • May introduce structural artifacts
Cell Fractionation • Technique that enables researchers to isolate organelles without destroying their function • Disrupted cells are centrifuged to isolate components of different sizes, densities, and shapes
Surface area: volume ratio Why do you cut up potatoes to boil them? • Place in order depending on which will dissolve fastest slowest • granulated sugar • Powdered sugar • Sugar cube • Fine sugar
Cells • Prokaryotic vs Eukaryotic • Cell sizes (0.1-100um) • What limits a cell from being too large? • Too small? • Eukaryotic cells have 1000x volume of prokaryotic cells, but only 100x the surface area. How can they compensate for the small surface area to volume ratio?
Prokaryote “before nucleus” Eukaryote “true nucleus”
A Generalized Cell Cytoplasm - all the cellular contents between the plasma membrane and the nucleus - cytosol - the fluid portion, mostly water *site of many chem. Rx. - organelles - subcellular structures having characteristic shapes and specific functions
Resist tension Bearing tension Resist compression The cytoskeleton - network of protein filaments throughout the cytosol -provides structural support for the cell -three types according to increasing size: microfilaments (cables), intermediate filaments (cables), and microtubules (support beams)
Organelles Centrosome - located near the nucleus, consists of two centrioles
Cilia and Flagella Cilia - short, hair-like projections from the cell surface, move fluids along a cell surface Flagella - longer than cilia, move an entire cell; ex. sperm cell’s tail
Internal Membranes • Partitions cell into compartments • Have unique lipid & protein compositions depending upon their specific fx. • Participate in metabolic reactions (enzymes)
Class I: membrane derived • 1. Nuclear envelope - a double membrane that separates the nucleus from the cytoplasm • Nuclear pores - numerous openings in the nuclear envelope, control movement of substances between nucleus and cytoplasm • Nucleolus - spherical body that produces ribosomes
2. Endoplasmic reticulum - network of membranes in the shape of flattened sacs or tubules - Rough ER - connected to the nuclear envelope, a series of flattened sacs, surface is studded with ribosomes, produces various proteins -Smooth ER - a network of membrane tubules, does not have ribosomes, synthesizes fatty acids and steroids, detoxifies certain drugs
3. Golgi complex - consists of 3-20 flattened, membranous sacs called cisternae • - modify, sort, and package proteins for transport to different destinations • - proteins are transported by various vesicles
Sacs made of membrane Transport substances throughout cell and to/fro membrane 4. Vesicles
5. Vacuoles • Food vacuole formed by phagocytosis (protists & macrophages) • Contractile vacuole pumps excess water from cell (protozoans) • Central vacuole enclosed by membrane (tonoplast); stores organic compounds, ions, poisons, provides turgor pressure (plants)
6. Lysosomes • Sequesters destructive enzymes from cytosol • Maintains optimum acidic environment for enzyme function http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/dl/free/0072437316/120060/ravenanimation.html
Peroxisome • Bound by a single membrane derived from lipids w/i cell • Contains enzymes that transfer Hydrogen atoms from various substrates to oxygen (H2O2). • Contains catalase that converts H2O2 to water. • Breaks down fatty acids • Detoxification of alcohol & other poisons (liver)
Class II: bacteria like organelles (energy production) • Mitochondria - the “powerhouses” of the cell • Generate ATP • More prevalent in physiologically active cells: muscles, liver and kidneys • Inner and outer mitochondrial membranes • Cristae - the series of folds of the inner membrane • Matrix - the large central fluid-filled cavity • Self-replicate during times of increased cellular demand or before cell division