This site is 100% ad supported. Please add an exception to adblock for this site.

Kim

Terms

undefined, object
copy deck
Cell theory
1. building blocks of all life 2. all cells from division of preexisting cells 3. smallest units that perform all vital physiological functions 4. ea. cell homeostasis 5. organize & coordinate with other cells to function as a unit
cytology
study of cellular structure & function
somatic cells
most cells are somatic: diploid: 46 chromosomes
sex cells
haploid: 23 chromosomes
cytoplasm vs. cytosol
cytoplasm is everything in Cell Membrane (organelles, etc.) EXCEPT nucleus: cytosol is liquid portion of cytoplasm
cell membrane
outer boundary of the cell; functions: 1. isolation 2. regulate exchange 3. sensitivity 4. structural support
cell membrane structure
phosopholipid bilayer membrane proteins, integral vs. peripheral: most are transmembrane membrane carbohydrates or glycocalyx
Functions of membrane protein
1. anchoring proteins 2. recognizer proteins 3. enzymes 4. receptor proteins 5. carrier proteins 6. channel proteins
Membane carbohydrates: glycocalyx
part of phosopholipid or on a protein Function: lube & protect; anchoring & locomation: specificity in binding; recognition
Cholesterol
provides stability for cell
passive vs. active transport
no energy needed vs. ATP expended
Diffusion
passive process: net movement of materials from high to low concentration, until gradient has been eliminated
factors affecting diffusion
molecule size, gradient size, distance, temperature, charge
osmosis
diffusion of water across sel. permeable membrane
osmotic pressure
pulling pressure, from high level of water to low level of water
hydrostatic
opposite of osmotic: pushes against fluid
Filtration
hydrostatic pressure forces water cross a membrane: pushes out nutrients, pulls in fluid: capillary beds, kidneys
Carrier mediated transport
substances that need to be carried by a protein
2 types of carrier mediated transport
Facillitated Diffusion & Active Transport
Facillitated diffusion
molecules bind to receptor sites; shape of protein changes; homones (like insulin) may be req. to help When carriers are saturated--rate of transport cannot increase
Active transport
req. ATP to move ions or molecules across membrane...doesn't req. conc. gradient
Ion pumps transport...
...K, Ca, Na, Mg (in countertransport)
Transport Processes
1. Diffusion 2. Osmosis 3. Filtration 4. Carrier Mediated Transport 5. Vesicular Transport
Vesicular transport
vesicles move thing in or out via endocytosis & exocytosis: BULK transport
3 types of endocytosis
1. Receptor mediated (with ligands) 2. Pinocytosis--cell drinking 3. Phagocytosis--cell eating
Receptor mediated
ligands trigger receptors & when pkts are full pinches in to form coated vesicles
Pinocytosis
similar to Receptor mediated, but no ligands involved
Phagocytosis
1.pseudopodia surround object 2. membranes fuse to form phagosome 3. fuses with lysosomes 4. digest
Exocytosis
reverse of endocytosis: excretion out of the cell
Transmembrane potential
difference in electrical charge across cell membrane: -70 millivolts in neurons; -85 mV in skeletal
Cell life cycle
Interphase (G1,S, G2, some G3) M phase: Mitosis (PMAT) Cytokinesis
Stages of Mitosis
Prophase Metaphase Anaphase Telophase (into cytokinesis)
Prophase
nuclear envelope disappears; chromatin coils & b/c chromosomes Centrioles move to poles; spindle apparatus forms
Metaphase
chromosomes line up with centromeres on the equator
Anaphase
centromeres break; chromosomes go to opposite ends of cell
Telephase
spindles disappear; centrioles go bk. towards nucleus; chromsomes uncoil; nuclear envelope reforms
cytokinesis
division of cytoplasm & splitting of cell along cleavage furrow
Interphase
G1: cells prep for division: start duplicating things S:Replication of DNA G2: Centriole replication & protein synthesis
DNA
provides info for the formation of structural and functional proteins and enzymes
mRNA
copy of a single gene goes out to a ribosome: nucleotide to amino acid to a protein
Cytoskeleton: Structure & Function
Structure:Microtubules; microfilaments; thick filaments; intermediate filaments Func: Maintain cell shape & assist w/intra or extra cellular movement
Microvilli: Structure & Function
Cellular extensions of the membrane Func: increase surface area for absorption
Cilia: Structure & Function
Structure: long slender extensions of cell membrane with microtubules Func: beat rhythmically to move fluids across the surface
Centriole
little bundles of microtubules: Func: Acts as anchor during mitosis (neurons lack tubules)
Ribosome
Globular protein Func: involved in translation of mRNA to produce protein: protein synthesis
Mitochondria
Structure: Double membrane bound organelle; smooth capsular outside/maze inside Func: produces energy in form of ATP
Rough Endoplasmic Reticulum
"swiss cheese" with ribosomes on outside: Func: transport & modify proteins
Smooth Endoplasmic recticulum
swiss cheese again: lipid synthesis
Golgi apparatus
stacks of flattened membranes, with hollows,like pitas (cisternae) Func: "post office" packages & delivers excretions, secretions & CM renewal vesicles
Lysosome
vesicles containing digestive enzymes Func: breakdown materials
Peroxisomes
vesicle Func: hydrogen peroxide cycle
Nucleus
enclosed in nuclear envelope & contains chromosomes Func: Control Center
Nucleolus
Dark spot in nucleus Func: production of ribosomes

Deck Info

53

kimaxs

permalink