ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY
CELL STRUCTURE AND THEIR FUNCTION
CELL STRUCTURE
Organelles:
      o specialized structures in cells that perform
      o specific functions
      o Example: nucleus, mitochondria, ribosomes Cytoplasm:
      o jelly-like substance that holds organelles
Cell membrane:
      o also termed the plasma membrane
      o a structure that encloses the cytoplasm
FUNCTION OF THE CELL
    •    Smallest units of life
    •    Cell metabolism and energy use
    •    Synthesis of molecules
    •    Communication
    •    Reproduction and inheritance
CELL MEMBRANE
  -is the outermost component of a cell
  -forms a boundary between material in inside the cell and the outside
  -materials inside the cell are intracellular and those outside are extracellular
  -acts as a selective barrier
CELL MEMBRANE STRUCTURE
  -fluid-mosaic model is the model used to describe the cell membrane structure
  -The membrane contains phospholipids, cholesterol, proteins, and carbohydrates.
  -Phospholipids form a bilayer.
  -Phospholipids contain 2 regions: polar and nonpolar.
PHOSPHOLIPIDS STRUCTURES
  -phospholipid molecule has a polar head region that is hydrophilic and a nonpolar tail region that is
hydrophobic.
  -The polar region is exposed to water around the membrane.
  -The nonpolar region is facing the interior of the membrane.
MOVEMENT THROUGH THE CELL MEMBRANE
  -The cell membrane has selective permeability, which allows only certain substances to pass in and out of the
cell.
  -Substances such as enzymes, glycogen, and potassium are found in higher concentrations inside the cell.
  -Substances such as sodium, calcium, and chloride are found in higher concentrations outside the cell.
CELL MEMBRANE PASSAGE
  -Some substances, like O2 and CO2, can pass
directly through the cell membrane’s phospholipid bilayer.
  -Some substances must pass through transmembrane protein channels, such as Na+ through its channels.
  -The route of transport through the membrane depends on the size, shape, and charge of the substance.
CELL MEMBRANE PASSAGE
  -Some substances require carrier molecules to transport them across the cell membrane, such as glucose.
  -Some substances require a vesicular transport across the membrane.
The vesicle must fuse with the cell membrane for transport.
ACTIVE TRANSPORT and PASSIVE TRANSPORT
  -Passive membrane transport does not require the cell to expend energy. It includes include diffusion, osmosis,
and facilitated diffusion.
  -Active membrane transport does require the cell to expend energy, usually in the form of ATP. It includes
active transport, secondary active transport, endocytosis, and exocytosis.
DIFFUSION
  -involves movement of substances in a solution down a concentration gradient.
  - movement from high concentration to a low concentration
  -A solution is generally composed of two major parts, solutes and the solvent.
  -Solutes are substances dissolved in a predominant liquid or gas, which is called the solvent.
  -Solutes, such as ions or molecules, tend to move from an area of higher concentration of a solute to an area
of lower concentration of that same solute in solution.
CONCENTRATION GRADIENTS
  - difference in the concentration of a solute in a solvent between two points divided by the distance between
the two points.
  - said to be steeper when the concentration difference is large and/or the distance is small.
LEAK and GATED CHANNELS
  -Leak channels constantly allow ions to pass through.
  -Gated channels limit the movement of ions across the membrane by opening and closing.
OSMOSIS
  -diffusion of water (a solvent) across a selectively permeable membrane from a region of higher water
concentration to one of lower water concentration.
  -Osmosis exerts a pressure, termed osmotic pressure, which is the force required to prevent movement of
water across cell membrane
OSMOTIC PRESSURE and the CELL
  -Osmotic pressure depends on the difference of solution concentrations inside a cell relative to outside the
cell.
  -A cell may be placed in solutions that are either hypotonic, isotonic, or hypertonic compared to the cell
cytoplasm.
HYPOTONIC
  -has a lower concentration of solutes and a higher concentration of water relative to the cytoplasm of the cell.
  -the solution has less tone, or osmotic pressure, than the cell.
  -swell the cell
  -if the cell swells enough, it can rupture, a process called lysis.
ISOTONIC
  -has the same solute concentrations inside and outside the cell.
  -shrink nor swell the cell.
  -equal
HYPERTONIC
  -has a lower solute concentration and higher water concentration than the surrounding solution.
  -shrinkage or crenation of the cell.
PISO- Potassium Inside, Sodium Out
CARRIER-MEDIATED TRANSPORT
  -Some water-soluble, electrically charged or large sized particles cannot enter or leave through the cell
membrane by diffusion.
  -These substances include amino acids, glucose, and some polar molecules produced by the cell.
  -Carrier molecules are proteins within the cell membrane involved in carrier-mediated transport.
CARRIER-MEDIATED TRANSPORT
  -Carrier-mediated transport mechanisms include facilitated diffusion and Active transport.
  -Facilitated diffusion does not require ATP for energy.
  -Active transport does require ATP for transport.
FACILITATED DIFFUSION
  -a carrier-mediated transport process that moves substances across the cell membrane from an area of higher
concentration to an area of lower concentration of that substance.
  -metabolic energy in the form of ATP is not required.
ACTIVE TRANSPORT
  -requiring ATP, that moves substances across the cell membrane from regions of lower concentration to those
of higher concentration against a concentration gradient.
  -accumulate necessary substances on one side of the cell membrane at concentrations many times greater
than those on the other side.
  -sodium-potassium pump is a major example of active transport is the action of the sodium-potassium pump
present in cell membranes.
  -sodium-potassium pump moves Na+ out of cells and K+ into cells. The result is a higher concentration of Na+
outside cells and a higher concentration of K+ inside cells.
SECONDARY ACTIVE TRANSPORT
   -uses the energy provided by a concentration gradient established by the active transport of one substance,
such as Na+ to transport other substances.
   -no additional energy is required
    -cotransport, the diffusing substance moves in the same direction as the initial active transported substance.
   -countertransport, the diffusing substance moves in a direction opposite to that of the initial active
transported substance.
ENDOCYTOSIS
  -process that that brings materials into cell using vesicles.
  -moving outside the cell
Receptor-mediated endocytosis
  -occurs when a specific substance binds to the receptor molecule and is transported into the cell.
Phagocytosis
  -used for endocytosis when solid particles are ingested.
Pinocytosis
  -much smaller vesicles formed, and they contain liquid rather than solid particles.
Secretory Vesicles
  -accumulate materials for release from the cell.
GENERAL CELL STRUCTURE
    o    CYTOPLASM- jelly-like fluid that surrounds the organelles.
     o     ORGANELLES- specialized structures that perform certain functions.
     o     CELL NUCLEUS- large organelle usually located near the center of the cell.
  -bounded by a nuclear envelope, which consists of outer and inner membranes with a narrow space between
them.
  -has 23 pairs of chromosomes
  -nucleoli found in DNA
      o     RIBOSOMES- produced in the nucleolus.
  -responsible for protein synthesis
  -may be attached to other organelles, such as the endoplasmic reticulum.
  -free ribosomes are not attached to any other organelle.
     o    ENDOPLASMIC RETICULUM- series of membranes forming sacs and tubules that extends from the
          outer nuclear membrane into the cytoplasm.
     o    ROUGH ER- involved in protein synthesis and is rough due to attached ribosomes.
     o    SMOOTH ER- has no attached ribosomes and is a site for lipid synthesis, cellular detoxification, and it
          stores calcium ions in skeletal muscle cells.
       o    GOLGI APPARATUS- consists of closely packed stacks of curved, membrane-bound sacs.
  -It collects, modifies, packages, and distributes proteins and lipids manufactured by the ER.
  -forms vesicles, some of which are secretory vesicles, lysosomes, and other vesicles.
     o     LYSOSOMES- membrane-bound vesicles formed from the Golgi apparatus.
  -contain a variety of enzymes that function as intracellular digestive systems.
     o    PEROXISOMES- small, membrane-bound vesicles containing enzymes that break down fatty acids,
          amino acids, and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2).
  -Hydrogen peroxide is a by-product of fatty acid and amino acid breakdown and can be toxic to a cell.
  -enzymes in peroxisomes break down hydrogen.
     o     MITOCHONDRIA- small organelles responsible for producing considerable amounts of ATP by aerobic
           (with O2) metabolism.
 -have inner and outer membranes separated by a space.
 -outer membranes have a smooth contour, but the inner membranes have numerous folds, called cristae,
which project into the interior of the mitochondria.
     o    CYTOSKELETON- gives internal framework to the cell. It consists of protein structures that support the
          cell, hold organelles in place, and enable the cell to change shape.
  -These protein structures are microtubules, microfilaments, and intermediate filaments.
     o    MICROTUBULES- hollow structures formed from protein subunits.
 -support such as cilia and flagella
     o     MICROFILAMENTS- small fibrils formed from protein subunits that structurally support the cytoplasm,
           determining cell shape.
  -provide movement of the cell
  -Microfilaments in muscle cells enable the cells to shorten, or contract.
     o     INTERMEDIATE FILAMENTS- fibrils formed from protein subunits that are smaller in diameter than
           microtubules but larger in diameter than microfilaments.
  -provide mechanical support to the cell.
       o    CENTRIOLES- specialized area of cytoplasm close to the nucleus where microtubule formation occurs.
  -contains two centrioles
  -it is small
  -involve mitosis process
      o   CILIA- project from the surface of certain cells.
  -responsible for the movement of materials over the top of cells, such as mucus.
  -composed of microtubules.
     o     MICROVILLI- specialized extensions of the cell membrane that are supported by microfilaments.
  -do not actively move as cilia and flagella do.
     o     WHOLE CELL ACTIVITY- cell’s characteristics are determine by the type of proteins produced. The
           proteins produced are in turn determined by the genetic information in the nucleus. Information in
           DNA provides the cell with a code for its cellular processes.
DNA
   -contains the information that directs protein synthesis; a process called gene expression.
   -consists of nucleotides joined together to form two nucleotide strands.
   -two strands are connected and resemble a ladder that is twisted around its long axis.
   -each nucleotide consists of a 5-carbon sugar, a phosphate group, and a nitrogenous base.
   -each nucleotide on one DNA strand has a specific bonding pattern to another nucleotide on the opposite
strand.
   -gene is a sequence of nucleotides that provides a chemical set of instructions for making a specific protein.
GENE EXPRESSION
  -which is protein synthesis, involves transcription and translation.
TRANSCRIPTION
  -involves copying DNA into messenger RNA.
  -takes place in the nucleus of the cell.
  -DNA determines the structure of mRNA through transcription.
  -DNA contains one of the following organic bases: thymine, adenine, cytosine, or guanine.
TRANSLATION
   -involves messenger RNA being used to produce a protein.
   -occurs in the cell cytoplasm after mRNA has exited the nucleus through the nuclear pores.
   -mRNA attaches to a ribosome.
   -Codons (3 nucleotide bases) on the mRNA are read by anticodons (3 nucleotide bases) on transfer RNA
(tRNA).
THE CELL CYCLE
   -During growth and development, cell division occurs to increase the number of cells or replace damaged or
dying ones.
   -This cell division involves a cell cycle.
   -The cell cycle includes two major phases: a nondividing phase, called interphase, and a cell dividing phase,
termed mitosis.
   -Replication of DNA gives two identical chromatids joined at a centromere; both form one chromosome.
CELL GENETIC CONTENT
  -23 pairs of chromosomes
MITOSIS
  -involves formation of 2 daughter cells from a single parent cell.
  -divided into four phases: prophase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase.
PROPHASE
  -during, the chromatin condenses to form visible chromosomes.
  -the nuclear membrane dissolves.
METAPHASE
 -during, the chromosomes align near the center of the cell.
 -the movement of the chromosomes is regulated by the attached spindle fibers.
ANAPHASE
  -beginning, the chromatids separate and each chromatid is called a chromosome.
  -end, each set of chromosomes has reached an opposite pole of the cell, and the cytoplasm begins to divide.
TELOPHASE
    -during, the chromosomes in each of the daughter cells become organized to form two separate nuclei, one
in each newly formed daughter cell.
   -following telophase, cytoplasm division is completed, and two separate daughter cells are produced.
DIFFERENTIATION
   -process by which cells develop with specialized structures and functions.
   -a sperm cell and an oocyte unite to form a single cell, then a great number of mitotic divisions occur to give
the trillions of cells of the body.
   -during, some portions of DNA are active, but others are inactive.
APOPTOSIS
   -termed programmed cell death, is a normal process by which cell numbers within various tissues are
adjusted and controlled.
   -developing fetus, apoptosis removes extra tissue, such as cells between the developing fingers and toes.
  -adult tissues, apoptosis eliminates excess cells to maintain a constant number of cells within the tissue.
CELLULAR ASPECTS OF AGING
There are various causes for cellular aging:
Existence of a cellular clock
Presence of death genes
DNA damage
Formation of free radicals
Mitochondrial damage
TUMORS
  -abnormal proliferations of cells.
  -they are due to problems occurring in the cell cycle.
  -some tumors are benign and some are malignant (cancer).
  -Malignant tumors can spread by a process, termed metastasis.