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Chapter 7: Cell Structure & Function

Chapter 7: Cell Structure & Function. http://koning.ecsu.ctstateu.edu/cell/cell.html. Discovery of Cells. Robert Hooke (1600’s) discovered “little chambers” (cells) in cork plant Anton van Leeuwenhoek (1600’s)used microscope to view living things in pond water. Saw things swimming around!.

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Chapter 7: Cell Structure & Function

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  1. Chapter 7: Cell Structure & Function http://koning.ecsu.ctstateu.edu/cell/cell.html

  2. Discovery of Cells • Robert Hooke (1600’s) discovered “little chambers” (cells) in cork plant • Anton van Leeuwenhoek (1600’s)used microscope to view living things in pond water. Saw things swimming around!

  3. Discovery of Cells, cont. • Matthias Schleiden (1838) concluded plants made of cells • Thoedor Schwann (1839) concluded all animals made of cells

  4. Cell Theory 1. All living things are made up of cells. 2. Cells are the smallest working units of all living things. 3. All cells come from preexisting cells through cell division.

  5. Definition of Cell A cell is the smallest unit that is capable of performing life functions.

  6. Examples of Cells Amoeba Proteus Plant Stem Bacteria Red Blood Cell Nerve Cell

  7. Two Types of Cells Prokaryotic “pro-” means “before” (like “pre”) “karyon” means “nut” or kernel” No nucleus Eukaryotic “eu-” means “true” Has nucleus

  8. Prokaryotic • Do not have organelles surrounded by membranes • Few internal structures • One-celled organisms, Bacteria http://library.thinkquest.org/C004535/prokaryotic_cells.html

  9. Eukaryotic • Contain organelles surrounded by membranes • Most living organisms Plant Animal http://library.thinkquest.org/C004535/eukaryotic_cells.html

  10. “Typical” Animal Cell http://web.jjay.cuny.edu/~acarpi/NSC/images/cell.gif

  11. “Typical” Plant Cell http://waynesword.palomar.edu/images/plant3.gif

  12. Eukaryotic Cell Parts Organelles

  13. Surrounding the Cell

  14. Cell Membrane • Outer membrane of cell that controls movement in and out of the cell • Double layers of fat “”phospholipid bilayer” http://library.thinkquest.org/12413/structures.html

  15. Cell Wall • Most commonly found in plant cells & bacteria & fungi • Supports & protects cells • Made of carbohydrate http://library.thinkquest.org/12413/structures.html

  16. Inside the Cell

  17. Nucleus • Directs cell activities • Separated from cytoplasm by nuclear membrane • Contains genetic material - DNA

  18. Nuclear Membrane • Surrounds nucleus • Made of two layers • Openings allow material to enter and leave nucleus http://library.thinkquest.org/12413/structures.html

  19. Chromatin • Form DNA takes most of the time. • Like spaghetti • Made of DNA wrapped up w/proteins

  20. Chromosomes • In nucleus • DNA wrapped up tight by proteins called “histones” • Contain instructions for traits & characteristics http://library.thinkquest.org/12413/structures.html

  21. Nucleolus • Inside nucleus • Contains RNA to build proteins http://library.thinkquest.org/12413/structures.html

  22. Cytoplasm • Gel-like mixture • Surrounded by cell membrane • Contains hereditary material in prokaryotes

  23. Ribosomes • Each cell contains thousands • Make proteins • Found on endoplasmic reticulum & floating in the cytoplasm http://library.thinkquest.org/12413/structures.html

  24. Endoplasmic Reticulum • Moves materials around in cell • Smooth type: lacks ribosomes • Rough type (pictured): ribosomes embedded in surface http://library.thinkquest.org/12413/structures.html

  25. Mitochondria • Produces energy through chemical reactions – breaking down fats & carbohydrates • Controls level of water and other materials in cell • Recycles and decomposes proteins, fats, and carbohydrates http://library.thinkquest.org/12413/structures.html

  26. Golgi Bodies • Protein 'packaging plant' • Move materials within the cell • Move materials out of the cell http://library.thinkquest.org/12413/structures.html

  27. Lysosome • Digestive 'plant' for proteins, fats, and carbohydrates • Transports undigested material to cell membrane for removal • Cell breaks down if lysosome explodes http://library.thinkquest.org/12413/structures.html

  28. Vacuoles • Membrane-bound sacs for storage, digestion, and waste removal • Contains water solution • Help plants maintain shape http://library.thinkquest.org/12413/structures.html

  29. Chloroplast • Usually found in plant cells (not in animal) • Contains green chlorophyll • Where photosynthesis takes place http://library.thinkquest.org/12413/structures.html

  30. Centrioles • Used during animal cell division (not present in plant & most other cells)

  31. Prokaryotic Cells • Ribosomes • DNA or RNA • cytoplasm

  32. Cell Boundaries • Cell Membrane 1. Controls what goes in & out 2. Support & protection • Cell Wall 1. Support & protection

  33. Diffusion through Cell Boundaries • Every cell lives in a liquid environment • Membrane controls movement of dissolved molecules back & forth (in & out of cell) • (Remember a solution contains a • Solvent: the substance that dissolves the other stuff (often water) • solute: the substance that gets dissolved (salt, sugar, ions, etc.)

  34. Concentration of Solutions • The greater the ratio of solute to solvent, the higher the concentration. • Ex: • Solution #1: dissolve 5 g of salt in 1L of water. Concentration= 5g/L • Solution #2: dissolve 10 g of salt in 1L of water. Concentration=10g/L

  35. Diffusion • In solution, particles move constantly, colliding & spreading out. • Diffusion is the movement of particles from area of greater to lesser concentration (b/c of random motion.) • Requires no energy to move substances across a membrane (b/c moved by random motion)

  36. Equilibrium • When solute concentration is equal throughout the solution

  37. Osmosis • The diffusion of water through a membrane • Some molecules are too large to move through a membrane

  38. How Osmosis Workssee Fig 7-15 on p 185 • If there is a selectively permeable membrane separating 2 solutions w/differing concentrations of solute, • Water will move from the side where it is in greater concentration to where it is in lesser concentration. (R to L in picture)

  39. Concentration of Solutions • Isotonic: when the concentration of particles is the same on both sides of membrane • Hypertonic: “above strength”- the stronger of the 2 solutions (L side) • Hypotonic: “below strength”- the less concentrated of the 2 solutions (R side)

  40. How Osmosis Works in Cellssee p 186 of text, Fig 7-16 • Isotonic: Cell maintains its shape • Hypertonic

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