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Explore the critical concepts of cell biology including the structure and processes of prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells, the role of membranes and organelles, and the functions of the cell membrane.
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AP Biology Exam Critical Concepts Chapters 6, 7, 8 The cell and its processes
Chapter 6 The Cell • Prokaryotic cells: • no nucleus • DNA: unbound region called the nucleoid • No membrane bound organelles • Cytoplasm: bound by the plasma membrane • Bacteria cells • Eukaryotic cells: • DNA in a nuclear envelope • Membrane bound organelles • generally much larger than prokaryotic cells • Animal, plant, protist, and fungi cells
Chapter 6 The Cell cont. • Plasma membrane: • selective barrier that allows sufficient passage of oxygen, nutrients, and waste to service the volume of every cell • double layer of phospholipids • logistics of carrying out cellular metabolism sets limits on the size of cells • surface area to volume ratio of a cell is critical • As surface area increases by a factor of n2, the volume increases by a factor of n3 • Small cells have a greater surface area relative to volume
Chapter 6 The Cell cont. • Eukaryotic cell has internal membranes that partition the cell into organelles • Plant and animal cells have most of the same organelles • Nucleus: • contains most of the cell’s genes/DNA • Nuclear envelope: encloses the nucleus, separating it from cytoplasm • a double membrane; each membrane consists of a lipid bilayer • Pores regulate the entry and exit of molecules from the nucleus
Chapter 6 The Cell cont. • Ribosomes: • particles made of ribosomal RNA and protein • carry out protein synthesis in two locations: • Free ribosomes: In the cytosol • Bound ribosomes: On the outside of the endoplasmic reticulum or the nuclear envelope • Endomembrane system: • Movement of material in cell • Vesicles: packets of material
Chapter 6 The Cell cont. • Endomembrane system components: • Nuclear envelope • Endoplasmic reticulum • Golgi apparatus • Lysosomes • Vacuoles • Plasma membrane • Endoplasmic Reticulum: • Material movement • Accounts for more than half of the total membrane in many eukaryotic cells
Chapter 6 The Cell cont. • Endoplasmic reticulum: membrane is continuous with the nuclear envelope • Two distinct regions of ER: • Smooth ER: lacks ribosomes • Synthesizes lipids • Metabolizes carbohydrates • Detoxifies poison and stores calcium • Rough ER: ribosomes studding its surface • Has bound ribosomes: secrete glycoproteins • Distributes transport vesicles • Is a membrane factory for the cell
Chapter 6 The Cell cont. • Golgi apparatus: • flattened membranous sacs called cisternae • Functions: • Modifies products of the ER • Manufactures certain macromolecules • Sorts and packages materials into transport vesicles
Chapter 6 The Cell cont. • Lysosome: • Hydrolytic enzymes that can digest proteins, fats, polysaccharides, and nucleic acids • Phagocytosis: Some types of cell can engulf another cell by this forms a food vacuole • Fuses with the food vacuole and digests the molecules • Use enzymes to recycle the cell’s own organelles and macromolecules, called autophagy
Chapter 6 The Cell cont. • Vacuoles: • plant cell or fungal cell may have one or several vacuoles • Food vacuoles: formed by phagocytosis • Contractile vacuoles: found in many freshwater protists, pump excess water out of cells • Central vacuoles: found in many mature plant cells, hold organic compounds and water
Chapter 6 The Cell cont. • Mitochondria and Chloroplasts: • Are not part of the endomembrane system • Have a double membrane • Contain their own DNA • Change energy from one form to another • Mitochondria: sites of cellular respiration • metabolic process that generates ATP • in nearly all eukaryotic cells • have a smooth outer membrane and an inner membrane folded into cristae • The inner membrane creates two compartments: intermembrane space and mitochondrial matrix
Chapter 6 The Cell cont. • Chloroplasts: in plants and algae • sites of photosynthesis • a member of a family of organelles called plastids • contain the green pigment chlorophyll, as well as enzymes and other molecules that function in photosynthesis • found in leaves and other green organs of plants and in algae
Chapter 6 The Cell cont. • Peroxisomes: • specialized metabolic compartments bounded by a single membrane • produce hydrogen peroxide and convert it to water • Oxygen is used to break down different types of molecules
Chapter 6 The Cell cont. • Cell Wall: • Extracellular structure that distinguishes plant cells from animal cells • Found in Prokaryotes, fungi, and some protists • Protects the plant cell • Maintains its shape • Prevents excessive uptake of water • made of cellulose fibers embedded in other polysaccharides and protein
Chapter 7 The Cell Membrane • Allows movement of material in and out • Boundary that separates the living cell from its surroundings • Selective permeability: allowing some substances to cross it more easily than others • Made of Phospholipids and Protein
Chapter 7 The Cell Membrane cont. Phospholipid bilayer Hydrophobic regions of protein Hydrophilic regions of protein
Chapter 7 The Cell Membrane cont. • Phospholipids in the plasma membrane can move within the bilayer • Most of the lipids, and some proteins, drift laterally Lateral movement (107 times per second) Flip-flop ( once per month)
Chapter 7 The Cell Membrane cont. Viscous Fluid Unsaturated hydrocarbon tails with kinks Saturated hydro-carbon tails
Chapter 7 The Cell Membrane cont. • The steroid cholesterol has different effects on membrane fluidity at different temperatures • warm temperatures (such as 37°C), cholesterol restrains movement of phospholipids • At cool temperatures, it maintains fluidity by preventing tight packing • Membrane is a collage of different proteins embedded in the fluid matrix of the lipid bilayer
Chapter 7 The Cell Membrane cont. • Proteins determine most of the membrane’s specific functions: • Peripheral proteins are bound to the surface of the membrane • Integral proteins penetrate the hydrophobic core • Transmembrane proteins: Integral proteins that span the membrane • Hydrophobic (nonpolar) molecules, such as hydrocarbons, can dissolve in the lipid bilayer and pass through the membrane rapidly • Polar molecules, such as sugars, do not cross the membrane easily
Chapter 7 The Cell Membrane cont. • Cell to cell recognition: • Cells recognize each other by binding to surface molecules, often carbohydrates, on the plasma membrane • Membrane carbohydrates may be covalently bonded to lipids (forming glycolipids) or more commonly to proteins (forming glycoproteins) • Carbohydrates on the external side of the plasma membrane vary among species, individuals, and even cell types in an individual
Chapter 7 The Cell Membrane cont. • Transport proteins: • Allow passage of hydrophilic substances across the membrane • Channel proteins, channel certain molecules/ions through membrane • Aquaporinsfacilitate the passage of water • Carrier proteins, bind to molecules and change shape to shuttle them across the membrane • is specific for the substance it moves
Chapter 7 The Cell Membrane cont. Signaling molecule Enzymes Receptor ATP Signal transduction (2) Enzymatic activity (3) Signal transduction (1) Transport
Chapter 7 The Cell Membrane cont. Glyco- protein (5) Intercellular joining (6) Attachment to the cytoskeleton and extracellular matrix (ECM) (4) Cell-cell recognition
Chapter 7 The Cell Membrane cont. • Passive transport: diffusion of a substance across a membrane with no energy investment • Diffusion: tendency for molecules to spread out evenly into the available space • Dynamic equilibrium: as many molecules cross one way as cross in the other direction • Concentration gradient: the difference in concentration of a substance from one area to another without energy
Chapter 7 The Cell Membrane cont. • Osmosis: Passive diffusion of water across a selectively permeable membrane • Water diffuses across a membrane from the region of lower solute concentration to the region of higher solute concentration • Tonicity: ability of a solution to cause a cell to gain or lose water
Chapter 7 The Cell Membrane cont. • Osmoregulation: the control of water balance • Isotonic solution: Solute concentration is equal in vs. out; no net water movement across the membrane • Hypertonic solution: Solute concentration is greater than that inside the cell • cell loses water to environment • the animal cell becomes flaccid (limp) • the plant may wilt (plasmolysis) • Hypotonic solution: Solute concentration is less than that inside the cell; cell gains water • A plant cell will swells until the wall opposes uptake; the cell is now turgid (firm) • An animal cell may burst (lyse)
Chapter 7 The Cell Membrane cont. Isotonic solution Hypotonic solution Hypertonic solution H2O H2O H2O H2O Animal cell Shriveled Normal Lysed H2O H2O H2O H2O Plant cell Turgid (normal) Plasmolyzed Flaccid
Chapter 7 The Cell Membrane cont. • Facultative transport: transport proteins speed the passive movement of molecules across the membrane • Channel proteins: provide corridors that allow a specific molecule or ion to cross the membrane • Include: • Aquaporins: for facilitated diffusion of water • Ion channels: open or close in response to a stimulus (gated channels) • Carrier proteins: undergo a subtle change in shape that translocates the solute-binding site across the membrane
Chapter 7 The Cell Membrane cont. • Active transport: moves substances against their concentration gradient • Requires energy, usually in the form of ATP • Transport proteins: specific proteins embedded in the membranes to help move substance • Ion pumps: include Na and K pumps • Proton pumps: create electrochemical gradient • Mitochondria and chloroplasts • Cotransport: active transport of a solute indirectly drives transport of another solute
Transport Occurs Through Membranes Chapter 7 The Cell Membrane cont. Active Transport = energy (ATP) Passive transport = no energy
Chapter 7 The Cell Membrane cont. • Bulk Transport: substances enter or leave the cell through the lipid bilayer or by transport proteins • Large macromolecules, cross the membrane in bulk via vesicles, requiring energy • Occurs by: • Exocytosis: transport vesicles migrate to the membrane, fuse with it, and release their contents • secretory cells exporting their products • Endocytosis: the cell takes in macromolecules by forming vesicles from the plasma membrane • There are three types
Chapter 7 The Cell Membrane cont. • Endocytosis types: • Phagocytosis (“cellular eating”) • In a cell engulfs a particle in a vacuole • The vacuole fuses with a lysosome to digest the particle • Pinocytosis (“cellular drinking”) • molecules are taken up when extracellular fluid is “gulped” into tiny vesicles • Receptor-mediated endocytosis • Binding of ligands to receptors triggers vesicle formation
Chapter 8 Cell Metabolism • Metabolism: is the totality of an organism’s chemical reactions • emergent property of life that arises from interactions between molecules within the cell • Metabolic pathway: begins with a specific molecule and ends with a product • Each step is catalyzed by a specific enzyme • Catabolic pathway: release energy by breaking down complex molecules into simpler compounds • Cellular respiration: breakdown of glucose in the presence of oxygen, is an example of a pathway of catabolism
Chapter 8 Cell Metabolism cont. • Anabolic pathway: consume energy to build complex molecules from simpler ones • The synthesis of protein from amino acids is an example of anabolism • Energy: the capacity to cause change • Kinetic energy: energy associated with motion • Heat (thermal energy): kinetic energy associated with random movement of atoms • Potential energy: energy that matter possesses because of its location or structure
Chapter 8 Cell Metabolism cont. • Chemical energy: potential energy available for release in a chemical reaction • Energy can be converted from one form to another • Thermodynamics: study of energy transformations • A closed system is isolated from its surroundings • An open system: energy and matter can be transferred between the system and its surroundings • Organisms are open systems • Catalysts: Substance that change the rate of reaction
Chapter 8 Cell Metabolism cont. • First law of thermodynamics: Energy can be transferred and transformed, but it cannot be created or destroyed • also called the principle of conservation of energy • Second law of thermodynamics: Every energy transfer or transformation increases the entropy (disorder) of the universe • During every energy transfer or transformation, some energy is unusable, and is often lost as heat • Exergonic reaction proceeds with a net release of free energy and is spontaneous
Chapter 8 Cell Metabolism cont. • Endergonic reaction: absorbs free energy from its surroundings and is nonspontaneous • A defining feature of life is that metabolism is never at equilibrium • A cell does three main kinds of work: powered by ATP • Chemical • Transport • Mechanical • To do work, cells manage energy resources by energy coupling, the use of an exergonic process to drive an endergonic one
Chapter 8 Cell Metabolism cont. • ATP: energy currency of the cell • The bonds between the phosphate groups of ATP’s tail can be broken by hydrolysis • Energy is released from ATP when the terminal phosphate bond is broken • This release of energy comes from the chemical change to a state of lower free energy, not from the phosphate bonds themselves
Nucleic Acid Structure is Similar to ATP Chapter 8 Cell Metabolism cont. ATP DNA Nucleotide
Chapter 8 Cell Metabolism cont. • Phosphorylation: transferring a phosphate group to some other molecule • ATP drives endergonic reactions • The recipient molecule is now phosphorylated • ATP is a renewable resource that is regenerated by addition of a phosphate group to adenosine diphosphate (ADP) • The energy to phosphorylate ADP comes from catabolic reactions in the cell • The chemical potential energy temporarily stored in ATP drives most cellular work
Chapter 8 Cell Metabolism cont. • Every chemical reaction between molecules involves bond breaking and bond forming • Activation energy (EA): initial energy needed to start a chemical reaction • often supplied in the form of heat from the surroundings • Enzymes catalyze reactions by lowering the EA barrier • Enzymes do not affect the change in free energy (∆G); instead, they hasten reactions that would occur eventually
Chapter 8 Cell Metabolism cont. • Substrate: the reactant that an enzyme acts on is • Enzyme-substrate complex: enzyme binds to its substrate • Active site: region on the enzyme where the substrate binds • Induced fit of a substrate brings chemical groups of the active site into positions that enhance their ability to catalyze the reaction • In an enzymatic reaction, the substrate binds to the active site of the enzyme
Chapter 8 Cell Metabolism cont. • Enzyme’s activity can be affected by • General environmental factors, such as temperature and pH • Chemicals that specifically influence the enzyme • Each enzyme has an optimal temperature in which it can function • Each enzyme has an optimal pH in which it can function • Cofactors: nonprotein enzyme helpers • may be inorganic (such as a metal in ionic form) or organic
Chapter 8 Cell Metabolism cont. • Coenzymes: organic cofactor • include vitamins • Competitive inhibitors: bind to the active site of an enzyme • competing with the substrate • Noncompetitive inhibitors: bind to another part of an enzyme • cause enzyme to change shape, making the active site less effective • include toxins, poisons, pesticides, and antibiotics • Allosteric site: a specific binding site that is not the active site
Chapter 8 Cell Metabolism cont. Substrate Active site Competitive inhibitor Enzyme Noncompetitive inhibitor (c) Noncompetitive inhibition (b) Competitive inhibition (a) Normal binding