Inside The Cell
Inside The Cell
Inside The Cell
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Contents
10
10
11
12
14
14
Science Schisms
18
20
Got Energy?
20
Priority: Proteins
21
26
30
32
33
34
37
39
40
42
Big Science
44
46
47
48
50
52
58
60
61
Thieving Oxygen
62
63
64
66
Death of a Cell
67
68
70
72
GLOSSARY
74
P R E FA C E
are done only by cells that are highly skilled for the
Nerve Cells
Blood Cells
CHAPTER 1
Mitochondria
Nucleus
Golgi
Rough ER
Smooth ER
Lysosomes
EUKARYOTIC CELLS
PROKARYOTIC CELLS
Virtually all forms of life fall into one of two categories: eukaryotes or prokaryotes.
Sugar Chains
Lipids
Proteins
Rough ER
Smooth ER
SUSUMU ITO
Rough ER
to 30 feet across.
Go ahead, put your ear next to it. Hear the
sizzling and gurgling? Thats the sound of power
ful enzymes and acids chewing to bits anything
that ends up inside.
But materials arent just melted into oblivion
in the lysosome. Instead, they are precisely chipped
into their component parts, almost all of which
the cell recycles as nutrients or building blocks.
Lysosomes also act as cellular garbage trucks,
hauling away unusable waste and dumping it
TINA CARVALHO
10
Mitochondria:
Cellular Power Plants
capacity of mitochondria.
Cell diameter
30 micrometers*
300 feet
Nucleus diameter
5 micrometers
50 feet
Mitochondrion length
18 feet
Lysosome diameter
503,000 nanometers*
5 inches to 30 feet
Ribosome diameter
2030 nanometers
23 inches
Microtubule width
25 nanometers
3 inches
10 nanometers
1.2 inches
59 nanometers
0.51 inch
*A micrometer is one millionth (10-6) of a meter. A nanometer is one billionth (10-9) of a meter.
12
cytoskeletonmicrotubules
in blue, intermediate fila
ments in red, and actin in
green play countless
roles in the cell.
Cytoskeleton:
KATHRYN HOWELL
TORSTEN WITTMANN
In these cells, actin laments appear light purple, microtubules yellow, and nuclei greenish blue.
This image, which has been digitally colored, won rst place in the 2003 Nikon Small World Competition.
of the cell? You can touch it, but dont try to bend
14
MICHAEL YAFFE
Morphing Mitochondria
Light Microscopes:
Electron Microscopes:
The Most Powerful of All
In the 1930s, scientists developed a new type of micro
scope, an electron microscope that allowed them
to see beyond what some ever dreamed possible. The
16
TINA CARVALHO
a detection plate.
Scanning electron
microscopes allow
scientists to see the
three-dimensional
surface of their samples.
day to survive.
18
Science Schisms
One great thing about science is that youre
allowed to argue about your work.
To gain new information, scientists ask a lot
of questions. Often, the answers spur more ques
tions. The never-ending circle not only feeds
Golgi
ER
Cell Membrane
Golgi
Cell Membrane
ER
Got It?
CHAPTER 2
BY ALISON DAVIS
Got Energy?
ning smoothly.
Human
Hummingbird
Chicken
Ostrich
Glucose
Priority: Proteins
O2
H2O
22
Code Reading
The rst step in building proteins is reading the
genetic code contained in your DNA. This process
is called transcription. Inside the cell nucleus,
where your DNA is safely packaged in chromo
somes, are miniature protein machines called RNA
polymerases. Composed of a dozen different small
proteins, these molecular machines rst pull apart
the two strands of stringy DNA, then transcribe the
DNA into a closely related molecule called RNA.
Researchers have used a technique called X-ray
crystallography to help unravel just how transcrip
tion occurs. As one example, Roger Kornberg of
the Stanford University School of Medicine in
California, used this tool to obtain a detailed, threedimensional image of RNA polymerase. The image
. Because proteins have diverse
affect when and how your body will use these genes.
DNA base
(A, T, G, or C)
RNA base
(A, U, G, or C)
Phosphate
Group
Phosphate
Group
DNA Subunit
RNA Subunit
Clamp
Jaws
Translation, Please
Once in the cells cytoplasm, each mRNA molecule
serves as a template to make a single type of protein.
Nucleotide Entry
Funnel and Pore
ALISA Z. MACHALEK
24
Amino Acids
Growing
Protein Chain
Ribosome
tRNA
mRNA
. Ribosomes manufacture
in the cell.
A Sweet Finish
Protein Origami
Proteins come in virtually every imaginable
shape, each containing a sophisticated
array of bends and folds that allow them
to do their jobs. Further proving that
a proteins proper three-dimensional
shape is critical to its function, scientists have
linked misfolded proteins to several diseases,
including Alzheimers, Huntingtons, Parkinsons,
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (Lou Gehrigs
disease), and cystic brosis.
But proteins dont always accomplish
their acrobatic folding feats by themselves.
Other molecules often help them along. These
molecules, which are also proteins, are aptly
named chaperones. Like their human namesakes,
chaperone proteins work around the clock to
prevent inappropriate interactions (molecular ones,
in this case) and to foster appropriate bonding.
Sugar Molecules
their proper
where proteins
interact with.
human proteins
include chains of
sugar molecules
that are critical for
the proteins to func
tion properly.
26
Vesicle Taxis
Perhaps the most challenging obstacle is mem
Endocytosis
Exocytosis
ria into molecular bits and pieces the cell can use.
through endocytosis.
28
Molecular Motors
Tiny Tunnels
assembled correctly.
Lipid Raft
Glycosphingolipids
Cholesterol
active states.
30
of meaning.
Got It?
is it important?
CHAPTER 3
BY ALISON DAVIS
ing those genes. For genes that are off, cells use
Nerve Cell
Egg
Sperm
Cone Cell
34
Sperm
Muscle Fiber
Embryonic
Stem Cells
us sick.
Growing It Back
ALISA Z. MACHALEK
36
TINA CARVALHO
38
your foot!
JOE DiGIORGIS
Hitching a Ride
Oocyte
Nurse Cells
cell function.
40
Odor Molecule
Receptor
Cell Membrane
G Protein
Cytoplasm
Cascade of
Chemical Reactions
Cell Connections
The human body operates by many of the same
molecular mechanisms as a mouse, a frog, or a
worm. For example, human and mouse genes are
about 86 percent identical. That may be humbling
to us, but researchers are thrilled about the similari
ties because it means they can use these simpler
creatures as experimental, model organisms to
help them understand human health. Often, scien
tists choose model organisms that will make their
experiments easier or more revealing. Some of the
most popular model organisms in biology include
bacteria, yeast cells, roundworms, fruit ies, frogs,
rats, and mice.
in Seattle.
42
Shape-Shifting Amoebae
Healing Wounds
The coverings for all your body parts (your skin, the
linings of your organs, and your mouth) are made
up primarily of epithelial cells. You might think that
Big Science
BRIAN OLIVER
44
Got It?
biological processes.
CHAPTER 4
B Y K I R S T I E S A LT S M A N
laugh and talk. But the one thing it could do, and
TED SALMON
TORSTEN WITTMAN
working order.
48
Prophase
Prometaphase
Metaphase
Anaphase
Telophase/Cytokinesis
Phases of Mitosis
Mitosis is responsible for growth and development, as well as for replacing
injured or worn out cells throughout your body. For simplicity, we have
Interphase
Prophase
Prometaphase
Metaphase
ANDREW S. BAJER
50
The stages of mitosis are clear in these cells from the African globe lily (Scadoxus katherinae) whose
enormous chromosomes are thicker in metaphase than the length of the longest human chromosome.
Anaphase
Telophase
Cytokinesis
52
TOGETHER AS A
Spindle Secrets
If mitosis is a show, then chromosomes are the
stars. The main plot line is the even distribution of
stars into two groups by the time the curtain goes
down. But the stars play an unusually passive role.
A director called the mitotic spindle moves them
from here to there on the cellular stage. The mitotic
spindlea football-shaped array of bers made of
microtubules and associated proteinsforms at
the beginning of mitosis between opposite ends,
or poles, of the cell.
The chromosomes (blue) become attached to the
spindle bers (green) early in mitosis. The spindle
is then able to move chromosomes through the
various phases of mitosis.
How spindle bers move chromosomes has cap
tivated scientists for decades, and yet the answer
remains elusive. Conly Rieder, a cell biologist at the
CONLY RIEDER
Phases of Meiosis
Meiosis is used to make sperm and egg cells. During meiosis, a cells
chromosomes are copied once, but the cell divides twice. For simplicity,
we have illustrated cells with only three pairs of chromosomes.
Prophase I
Interphase
In Prophase I, the
matching chromo
somes from your
mother and father
pair up.
Prometaphase I
Metaphase I
Anaphase I
Telophase I
Cytokinesis
54
Cytokinesis
Prophase II
Prometaphase II
Metaphase II
Anaphase II
Telophase II
Cytokinesis
56
Mitosis
Interphase
Meiosis
Interphase
Prophase I
Prometaphase I
Metaphase I
Anaphase I
Telophase I
Cytokinesis
Prophase
Prometaphase
Metaphase
Anaphase
Telophase
Cytokinesis
Diploid Cells
Haploid Cells
Cytokinesis
Prophase II
Prometaphase II
Metaphase II
Anaphase II
Telophase II
Cytokinesis
58
of genes in common.
increasing diversity.
Got It?
You share some genes, and hence some physical traits, with your
parents and your other relatives. But thanks to meiosis, you are
a unique individual.
CHAPTER 5
B Y K I R S T I E S A LT S M A N
UN/DPI PHOTOS
Inside the Cell I The Last Chapter: Cell Aging and Death 61
JENNA KARLSBERG
Beautiful. This image of a womans eye was photographed and titled by her
15-year-old granddaughter.
this page.
62
Thieving Oxygen
Inside the Cell I The Last Chapter: Cell Aging and Death 63
64
Inside the Cell I The Last Chapter: Cell Aging and Death 65
had stopped.
66
eventual retirement.
in preliminary studies.
According to most scientists, aging is caused
Inside the Cell I The Last Chapter: Cell Aging and Death 67
Death of a Cell
cell deathapoptosis.
of pneumonia.
68
Inside the Cell I The Last Chapter: Cell Aging and Death 69
70
Inside the Cell I The Last Chapter: Cell Aging and Death 71
screeching halt.
Still other viruses, such as smallpox, inhibit
far behind.
72
NICOLE CAPPELLO
JEFF MILLER
CHRIS T. ANDERSON
Got It!
74
Glossary
amino acids.
model organism.
as a virus or bacterium.
particles (ions).
source of a chemical.
some hormones.
human body.
76
altered or consumed.
human body.
G protein | A protein located on the inside of the
Endocytosis (EN-doe-sye-TOE-sis) | A process
cells use to engulf particles or liquid from their
and testosterone.
Mitochondrion (MITE-oh-KON-dree-un)
(plural: mitochondria) | The cells power plant;
the organelle that converts energy from food into
78
the chromosomes.
nerve cell.
called transcription.
of the cell.
RNA, ribonucleic (RYE-bo-new-CLAY-ick) acid | Telomeres do not contain genes and, in the absence
A molecule very similar to DNA that plays a key
role in making proteins. There are three main types:
messenger RNA (mRNA) is an RNA version of a
gene and serves as a template for making a protein,
ribosomal RNA (rRNA) is a major component of
ribosomes, and transfer RNA (tRNA) transports
amino acids to the ribosome and helps position
80
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