Cell Structure and Function
Cell Structure and Function
Image drawn by Thomas M. Terry for The Biology Place. Used with permission.
The Nucleus: locus of DNA & RNA synthesis and protein assembly
• Endoplasmic Reticulum
o Rough ER: synthesizes proteins for export or movement to
different cell compartments (but not to cytoplasm). View quicktime
movie of rER [353 KB, 00:59 min, from Cells.De Online service for
cell biology] .
o Signal hypothesis: certain mRNAs encode proteins designated for
export. These carry a peptide signal at growing end, causes growing
protein to move to ER ("docking"), insert peptide into membrane,
translocate growing polypeptide chain across ER membrane. When
protein synthesis is complete, polypeptide folds up inside ER, not in
cytoplasm.
o View diagram showing ribosomes attaching to ER
o Smooth ER (sER): synthesizes lipids, detoxifies drugs and poisons
(in liver).
View smooth ER -- structure labeled "1".
• Golgi body
o functions as intracellular "post office" for sorting new proteins made
on rER.
o Vesicles containing protein pinch off from ER, fuse with cis face of
Golgi. Inside Golgi, oligosaccharide chains on proteins are
modified. Vesicles pinch off from trans face of Golgi, carry proteins
to several possible destinations: export (out of cell), lysosomes,
peroxisomes, cell membrane, etc.
o View diagrams showing how substance move through Golgi body
o View animation of secretion from rER to Golgi to cell exterior
(Campbell website activity)
• Lysosomes
o compartments to break down old proteins, foreign materials, many
wastes.
o Contain ~40 hydrolytic enzymes: lipases, proteases, nucleases, etc.
Break down organic polymers of all types.
o "Suicide bags" if opened up on cell itself = apoptosis.
o Lysosomes are used in phagocytosis, a process in which foreign
materials are brought into the cell and "chewed up".
o View animation showing phagocytosis. (Flash animation by Tom
Terry, 2001)
o View diagrams of lysosomes
o View
o animation of secretion from rER to Golgi to lysosome (Campbell
website activity)
• Cell membrane (aka plasma membrane) - see Ch. 8
• Vacuoles
o large membrane compartments (contrasted with small membrane
bags called vesicles).
o Plant cells have especially large vacuole called the central vacuole,
can occupy most of the volume of a plant cell. Stores pigments,
wastes, water, poisons, and more
Endosymbiont theory: All organelles seem to share many properties with bacteria:
contain 70S ribosomes (whereas rest of eukaryote cells contain 80S ribosomes),
divide by binary fission, contain circular DNA without nucleus, etc. Lynn Margulis
proposed endosymbiont hypothesis: that organelles derived from ancient
colonization of large bacteria (became the eucaryotic cell) by smaller bacteria
(became the mitochondria, chloroplast, etc.) Symbiosis = "living together".
Eventually, organelles lost ability to exist as separate organisms, cannot be
separated from cell. Recent evolutionary taxonomy by comparing ribosomal RNA
shows that this idea has lots of merit. Mitochondrial and plastid ribosomes are very
similar to current bacteria, very different from eukaryotes.
Build a cell (Campbell website activity)
• Microtubules
o Largest diameter fiber. Found in cytoplasm of all eukaryotes.
o Involved in many structures: cilia, flagella (9+2 arrangement);
spindle fibers that polymerize from centrioles during
mitosis/meiosis.
o Made of tubulin protein; polymerizes into hollow tubules 25 nm
diameter.
o View cell treated with anti-tubulin fluourescent antibody
o Cilia and flagella: organelles of locomotion. Contain 9 double rings
of microtubules, 2 central microtubules.
o View micrographs showing structure of cilia
o View SEM of cilia on surface of epithelial tissue
o Two motor proteins allow motion along microtubules
1. Motor protein 1 -- Dynein
side arms allow one tubule to "walk up" along
neighboring tubule, cause bending (powered by
ATP).
animation of microtubule motion (Campbell website
activity)
Causes motion from positive (+) end of the
microtubule (where new tubulin is added to the
microtubule) toward the minus (-) end of the
microtubule.
When coordinated, this causes rotating or whip-like
motion of entire cilium or flagellum --->motion.
View animation of dynein pulling vesicle along a
microtubule
2. Motor protein 2 -- Kinesin
Also powered by ATP, also allows protein to move
along microtubule
Causes motion from negative (-) end of the
microtubule toward the positive (+) end of the
microtubule (where new tubulin is added to the
microtubule).
pulls things toward outer reaches of cell
Example: in nerve cells, kinesin pulls vesicles away
from center towards nerve endings.
View animation of kinesin pulling vesicle along a
microtubule
View more sophisticated animation of kinesin
moving along a microtubule. (Select either the
Quicktime or MPEG movie titled "Structural
Analysis of the Kinesin Motor Protein" ) )
• Microfilaments (= actin)
o another kind of fiber. Found in cytoplasm of most eukaryotes.
o nvolved in muscle contraction, cell support, pinching off of daughter
cells after mitosis (in animals), cytoplasmic streaming (in plants).
o View TEM of microvilli (protected) of the striated border of
epithelial tissue. Microfilaments within them can be seen extending
down into the terminal web, an aggregate of fine filaments lying in
the cell cytoplasm.
o View animation showing "treadmilling" of actin -- subunits are
added at one end, removed at the other, producing net migration of
the filament in one direction.
o View movie showing cell movement (left panel) and assembly of
actin (right panel) (2.8 Meg file)
• Intermediate filaments
o a third kind of fiber.
o Made from keratin subunits. Not so quickly assembled and
disassembled as microtubules or microfilaments.
o May be involved in resisting tension, reinforcing cell shape, fixing
location of nucleus.
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