Chapter 3: Cell Structure and Internal Compartments: Key Concepts
Chapter 3: Cell Structure and Internal Compartments: Key Concepts
Chapter 3: Cell Structure and Internal Compartments: Key Concepts
2
Mitochondrion, often dubbed the powerhouse of the cell because it
supplies energy, is another example of an organelle bounded by two
membranes.
Mitochondrion: An organelle with a double membrane that is the site of
cellular respiration in eukaryotes. Mitochondria break down simple
sugars to produce ATP in an oxygen-dependent (aerobic) process.
Prokaryotes- bacteria and archaeans – are generally regarded as single-
celled organisms.
The light microscope was invented in the last quarter of the sixteenth
century.
The key components of early light microscopes were ground-glass lenses
that bent incoming rays of light to produce magnified images of tiny
specimen.
The study of cells began in the seventeenth century when Robert Hooke
examined a piece of cork under a microscope and noticed that it was
made up of little compartments.
Multicellularity enables larger body size and efficiency through division of
labor.
Being big or small as a cell can have its pros and cons.
Paramecium can ingest several thousand bacteria a day.
Multicellular organism: An organism made up of more than one cell.
The cells from a multicellular organism is identical because they arose
from a single cell.
If the cells from a multicellular organism is separated, they would not be
able to survive on their own in nature.
Adaptive benefits of multicellularity go beyond getting food or avoiding
becoming; multicellularity makes cell specialization possible.
Cell specialization enables division of labor among the cells.
The human body has 220 different types of cells.
Why are most cells small? A larger cell has less surface area relative to its
volume and can’t exchange materials with its environment as efficiently
as a smaller cell.
3
3.2 – The Plasma Membrane
A key characteristic of every cell is the existence of a plasma membrane
separating that cell from its surrounding environment.
The lipid boundary created by the plasma membrane has the effect of
enclosing and concentrating necessary raw materials in a limited space,
thereby facilitating chemical processes.
The plasma membrane helps enable the cell to capture essential
molecules while shutting unwanted ones, releases waste products but
prevents needed molecules from leaving the cell, interacts with the
outside world by receiving and sending signals as necessary, and provides
an anchoring function for cells that are held firmly in place.
The diverse functions of the plasma membrane are made possible chiefly
by the many different types of membrane proteins associated with, or
embedded in, the phospholipid bilayer.
Selective permeability comes from the different types of proteins
embedded in the phospholipid bilayer: transport proteins, receptor
proteins, and adhesion proteins.
Transport proteins are membrane-spanning proteins whose function is to
assist the import or export of substances.
Some transport proteins form tunnels that allow passage of selected ions
and molecules.
Receptor proteins act as sites for signal perception, and as such they are
key components of a cell’s communication system.
Extracellular matrix (ECM): Most cells in the animal body are attached to
the other cells, or to a dense mat of biomolecules.
Chains of sugars are covalently linked to the cell surface side of adhesion
proteins, and these carbohydrate groups help in both the recognition and
the interlinking that are necessary for cell attachment.
Collagen is the most abundant protein in the human body, and
destruction of collagen over time leads to wrinkling and sagging as we
age.
4
Most plasma membrane proteins are free to drift within the plane of the
phospholipid bilayer.
Fluid mosaic model: The concept of the plasma membrane as a
phospholipid bilayer containing a variety of other lipids and embedded
proteins, some of which can move laterally in the plane of the
membrane.