ap bio unit 2 - cell structure and function
Cell Types
Prokaryote
No membrane bound organelles
Different sections do different things but not super organized
Genetic information is free floating in the cytoplasm
Circular DNA
Plasmids contain genes that can be passed between individuals
Usually smaller than eukaryotes
Only bacteria and archaea are prokaryotes
Eukaryotes
Contains membrane bound organelles
Endosymbiotic theory explains how organelles arose
Large prokaryotes swallowed smaller prokaryotes and formed symbiotic relationship
Mitochondria, nuclei, and chloroplasts are cited as evidence
Mitochondria and chloroplasts have their own DNA, smaller ribosomes * like bacteria) and double membranes
Help compartmentalize cell
Allows increased surface area for some processes and keeps them from competing
Stuff inside only Eukaryotes
Nucleus- Contains genetic information
Contains DNA and RNA
Core is called the nucleolus
Outside of the nucleus is called the nuclear envelope
Nuclear envelope has pores (holes) that allow stuff in and out
Endoplasmic Reticulum-
Used to synthesize macromolecule
Made from nuclear envelope
Rough E.R.- closest to the nucleus
Covered in ribosomes
Synthesizes proteins (RIBOSOMES MAKE PROTEIN!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!)
Does not protect the nucleus
Smooth E.R.
No ribosomes (smooth)
Synthesizes lipids
Used in detoxification
Golgi-
Modifies and packages proteins
Made from E.R.
Made of flattened sacs
Lysosome-
Used in digestion and to break down things inside the cell
Made from the golgi
Hollow except for hydrolytic enzymes (enzymes that do hydrolysis)
Vacuole-
Membrane-bound sacs that have a variety of uses
Most prominent is the large vacuole found in plant cells
Mitochondria
Where ATP is made in eukaryotes
Double membrane
Exterior membrane is smooth and allows stuff in and out
Interior membrane is very folded! (cristae)
Increases surface area for electron transport chain
Interior fluid is where krebs cycle occurs (intercellular matrix)
Evidence for endosymbiotic theory
Cilia and Flagella
Used for movement
Powered by ATP made by cellular respiration
Flagella- a swimming tail
Cilia- “fur” covering the outside of the cell that wiggle to move the cell
Plant Cells
Have all the above parts and two additional organelles
Also have defined shape unlike animal cells
Chloroplast
Where photosynthesis occurs
Used to make glucose for the plant from the sun
Full of the pigment chlorophyll
Two membranes
Thylakoids look like pancakes
Stacks are called granum
Location of light dependant reactions
Stroma- fluid inside the inner membrane
Location of light independent reactions
Cell Wall (made of cellulose)
Found outside of the cell membrane
Used to provide structure and support to the cell
Does not control what enters and leaves the cell
Organelles ALL cells have
Ribosomes-
Where translation occurs
Is an evidence of evolution
Since all cells have ribosomes then they share a common ancestor
Prokaryotes have a smaller ribosome than eukaryotes
Cell Membrane
Allows stuff into and out of the cell
Made of phospholipids and proteins
Phospholipids have hydrophobic tails and hydrophilic heads
Small, non-charged particles pass freely through the membrane
Large and/or charged particles need help from a protein to pass through
Cell Transport
Several factors impact how and how quickly things move across a membrane
Surface area- increase in surface area/volume ratio increase the rate of diffusion
Volume increases faster than surface area
This limits cell size
Polarity-
Large polar molecules can’t get through a membrane without a protein
a-helixes can spiral through the membrane
Concentration
Large differences in concentration lead to faster diffusion
Concentrations want to reach equilibrium
Fluid mosaic model
Phospholipid bilayer acts like a “sea” of phospholipids
Proteins float in the membrane like icebergs
Phospholipids can change positions with each other and are not static
Types of Transport
Passive transport
DOES NOT USE ENERGY
Always moves from high concentration to low concentration
Osmosis and facilitated diffusion are examples
Osmosis is the movement of water across a membrane
Osmoregulation allows cells to maintain homeostasis
Aquaporins are tubes that allow water to diffuse faster
Facilitated Diffusion is passive transport that uses a protein
Non-polar parts of protein fit in non-polar part of the phospholipd
Polar parts of proteins stick to polar heads of phospholipids
Active transport
Transport uses energy (ATP) AND a protein
Goes from low concentration to high concentration (against the concentration gradient)
Sodium-Potassium pump-
loses 3 Na+ and gains 2 K+
lets the cell maintain an overall (-) environment
Much higher concentration of K inside the cell than outside the cell
Endocytosis- absorbs large things into the cell
Ectocytosis- removes large things from a cell
Tonicity
How much stuff is dissolved in a solution
Tell you how water moves
Hypertonic
Water moves INTO the solution
Plant cell will shrivel but keep its shape (plasmolysed)
Animal cell will shrivel up
Hypotonic
Water moves OUT of the solution
Plant cells become turgid (full and rigid)
Animal cell will explode
Isotonic
Water moves INTO and OUT of the solution at the same time, no net change
Water Potential
𝛙=𝛙s+𝛙p
𝛙= Water Potential
Pure water is 0 everything else is negative
𝛙p = Pressure potential
-For your test will be equal to 0 unless they say it isn’t
𝛙s= Solute potential - How much stuff is dissolved in water.
Adding more stuff makes it more negative
Solute Potential
Ψ s = -iCRT
i= the number of ions the solute breaks into (when put in water)
NaCl=2
Sucrose=1 (doesn’t ionize in water)
C= molar concentration of the solution
R= .0831, (gas constant)
T= Temperature in Kelvin (oC + 273)
Cell Types
Prokaryote
No membrane bound organelles
Different sections do different things but not super organized
Genetic information is free floating in the cytoplasm
Circular DNA
Plasmids contain genes that can be passed between individuals
Usually smaller than eukaryotes
Only bacteria and archaea are prokaryotes
Eukaryotes
Contains membrane bound organelles
Endosymbiotic theory explains how organelles arose
Large prokaryotes swallowed smaller prokaryotes and formed symbiotic relationship
Mitochondria, nuclei, and chloroplasts are cited as evidence
Mitochondria and chloroplasts have their own DNA, smaller ribosomes * like bacteria) and double membranes
Help compartmentalize cell
Allows increased surface area for some processes and keeps them from competing
Stuff inside only Eukaryotes
Nucleus- Contains genetic information
Contains DNA and RNA
Core is called the nucleolus
Outside of the nucleus is called the nuclear envelope
Nuclear envelope has pores (holes) that allow stuff in and out
Endoplasmic Reticulum-
Used to synthesize macromolecule
Made from nuclear envelope
Rough E.R.- closest to the nucleus
Covered in ribosomes
Synthesizes proteins (RIBOSOMES MAKE PROTEIN!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!)
Does not protect the nucleus
Smooth E.R.
No ribosomes (smooth)
Synthesizes lipids
Used in detoxification
Golgi-
Modifies and packages proteins
Made from E.R.
Made of flattened sacs
Lysosome-
Used in digestion and to break down things inside the cell
Made from the golgi
Hollow except for hydrolytic enzymes (enzymes that do hydrolysis)
Vacuole-
Membrane-bound sacs that have a variety of uses
Most prominent is the large vacuole found in plant cells
Mitochondria
Where ATP is made in eukaryotes
Double membrane
Exterior membrane is smooth and allows stuff in and out
Interior membrane is very folded! (cristae)
Increases surface area for electron transport chain
Interior fluid is where krebs cycle occurs (intercellular matrix)
Evidence for endosymbiotic theory
Cilia and Flagella
Used for movement
Powered by ATP made by cellular respiration
Flagella- a swimming tail
Cilia- “fur” covering the outside of the cell that wiggle to move the cell
Plant Cells
Have all the above parts and two additional organelles
Also have defined shape unlike animal cells
Chloroplast
Where photosynthesis occurs
Used to make glucose for the plant from the sun
Full of the pigment chlorophyll
Two membranes
Thylakoids look like pancakes
Stacks are called granum
Location of light dependant reactions
Stroma- fluid inside the inner membrane
Location of light independent reactions
Cell Wall (made of cellulose)
Found outside of the cell membrane
Used to provide structure and support to the cell
Does not control what enters and leaves the cell
Organelles ALL cells have
Ribosomes-
Where translation occurs
Is an evidence of evolution
Since all cells have ribosomes then they share a common ancestor
Prokaryotes have a smaller ribosome than eukaryotes
Cell Membrane
Allows stuff into and out of the cell
Made of phospholipids and proteins
Phospholipids have hydrophobic tails and hydrophilic heads
Small, non-charged particles pass freely through the membrane
Large and/or charged particles need help from a protein to pass through
Cell Transport
Several factors impact how and how quickly things move across a membrane
Surface area- increase in surface area/volume ratio increase the rate of diffusion
Volume increases faster than surface area
This limits cell size
Polarity-
Large polar molecules can’t get through a membrane without a protein
a-helixes can spiral through the membrane
Concentration
Large differences in concentration lead to faster diffusion
Concentrations want to reach equilibrium
Fluid mosaic model
Phospholipid bilayer acts like a “sea” of phospholipids
Proteins float in the membrane like icebergs
Phospholipids can change positions with each other and are not static
Types of Transport
Passive transport
DOES NOT USE ENERGY
Always moves from high concentration to low concentration
Osmosis and facilitated diffusion are examples
Osmosis is the movement of water across a membrane
Osmoregulation allows cells to maintain homeostasis
Aquaporins are tubes that allow water to diffuse faster
Facilitated Diffusion is passive transport that uses a protein
Non-polar parts of protein fit in non-polar part of the phospholipd
Polar parts of proteins stick to polar heads of phospholipids
Active transport
Transport uses energy (ATP) AND a protein
Goes from low concentration to high concentration (against the concentration gradient)
Sodium-Potassium pump-
loses 3 Na+ and gains 2 K+
lets the cell maintain an overall (-) environment
Much higher concentration of K inside the cell than outside the cell
Endocytosis- absorbs large things into the cell
Ectocytosis- removes large things from a cell
Tonicity
How much stuff is dissolved in a solution
Tell you how water moves
Hypertonic
Water moves INTO the solution
Plant cell will shrivel but keep its shape (plasmolysed)
Animal cell will shrivel up
Hypotonic
Water moves OUT of the solution
Plant cells become turgid (full and rigid)
Animal cell will explode
Isotonic
Water moves INTO and OUT of the solution at the same time, no net change
Water Potential
𝛙=𝛙s+𝛙p
𝛙= Water Potential
Pure water is 0 everything else is negative
𝛙p = Pressure potential
-For your test will be equal to 0 unless they say it isn’t
𝛙s= Solute potential - How much stuff is dissolved in water.
Adding more stuff makes it more negative
Solute Potential
Ψ s = -iCRT
i= the number of ions the solute breaks into (when put in water)
NaCl=2
Sucrose=1 (doesn’t ionize in water)
C= molar concentration of the solution
R= .0831, (gas constant)
T= Temperature in Kelvin (oC + 273)