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Cells are fundamental units of life
All organisms are composed of cells
All cells come from preexisting cells |
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visible light is passed through the specimen and then through glass lenses (normal microscope) |
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Focuses a beam of electrons through the specimen or onto its surface |
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Scanning Electron Microscope |
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electron beam scans the surface of the sample usually coated with a thin film of gold |
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Transmission Electron Microscope |
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aims an electron beam through a very thin secton of the specimen that has been stained with atoms of heavy metals |
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- DNA- Single circle in nucleoid region
- Size- 1-10
- Organization- single celled, most have peptiodoglycan cellwalls
- Metabolism- May not need Oxygen
- Organelles- Don't have
- Examples- Bacteria, archea
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- DNA- Linear strands within membrane bound nucleus
- Size- 10-100
- Organization- Often multicellular some have cell walls but no peptidoglycan
- Metabolism- need oxygen to exist
- Organelles- Have them
- Examples- Plants, animals, protists, fungi
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- Rough ER- ribosomes attached makes polypeptides to be secreted from cell
- Smooth ER- no ribosomes, contains enzymes, lipids, carb
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- Associated with ER
- Recieves products from ER
- Modified/processed-gycolysltron
- Secreted in vesicles
- Reciveing (Cis Face)
- Shipping (Trans Face)
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Definition
- Intracellular Digestion
- Only found in animal cells
- Hydrolyze macromolecules
- Bacteria, food, foreign debris, worn-out organelles
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Definition
- Plant Cells- large central vacuole help cell maintain shape
- involved in turger, storage, ect.
- can take up 90% of the volume of cell
- Helps maintain pressure allowing plants to grow
- sometimes hold toxins for self defense
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Food Vacuoles
contractile vacuoles, helps keep cells from bursting due to osmosis |
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Mainly storage in specialized cells |
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- Need oxygen
- energy releasing organelles
- maternally inherited
- cellular respiration
- convert nutrients into energy ATP
- circular DNA molecule
- bacterial origin-symbiont
- 2 layers of membrane- smooth outer membrane, folded inner membrane
- Have own ribosomes
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- Appear in plants and some protists
- Photosynthesis
- Convert energy from sunlight to chemical bond energy
- circular DNA molecule
- Bacterial origin symbiont
- filled with liquid called stroma
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Organelles in both Plant and Animal Cells |
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Definition
- Plasma Membrane
- Nucleus
- ER
- Golgi Body
- Vesicles
- Mitochondria
- Ribosomes
- Cytoskeleton-protein fibers that keep cell structure and movement
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Definition
- Lysosomes
- Flagella
- Centrioles-microtubule, organizing structure
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Definition
- Cell Wall
- Chloroplasts
- Central Vaculole
- Plasmodesmata-small holes in cell membrane
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- Internal support of a cell
- Help cell movement
- 3 types- Microtubulule, Intermediate filament, microfilament
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- Wall gets thicker as cell gets older
- Made of cellulose
- Hold against cell membrane
- Plasmodesmata-small holes conect cytoplasm of 2 cells to allow for communication between cells
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Definition
- Cell Junctions allow for communication
- Tight Junction-press against cell membranes to keep leak proof
- Anchoring Junction-intermediate filaments of desmosome
- Gap Junction-little channel linking cytoplasm form cell to cell
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- Around all kinds of cells
- vesicles for transport of substances in/out of cells=Endo/Exoytosis
- Membrane bound organelles
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- Control the movement of substances into and out of cell
- To keep cell's content together and sperate from other cells
- To allow communication between cells-membranes connect to each other and can communicate
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Definition
- Special type of lipid- 2 fatty acids chains making hydrophobic tail
- chains have no charge and are non-polar/insoluble
- Phosphate group is hydrophilic=has charge
- are amphipathic ( both hydrophobic and phillic
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Definition
- Lateral Movement- 10 mill per second just switch side to side
- Flip Flop- once per month hydrophilic head must go through hydrophobic region and must break hydrogen bond to move in first place
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Glycoprotiens and Glycolipids |
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Definition
All proteins with sugar side chains are involved in cell-cell signaling and self recoginition
this is important in the immune system response and recognizing bacterial invasion |
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Definition
high concentration to lower concentration
going down concentration gradient |
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The passage of molecules across phospholipid bilayer |
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Definition
- Polarity
- charge
- Size
- Hydrophobic substances get through, Hydrophilic ones do not
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Water channel
Aquaporin is a large integral protein include 7 transmembrane alpha helixes |
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Definition
- Hydrophilic molecules and ions are transported by transport proteins that span membrane
- Proteins are always open at either end
- Membrane gates- not always open, only one side opens at a time
- Net rate of diffusion from high concentration to low, moving down the concentration gradient
- does not consume energy
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Definition
- Enzymes couple net solute movement across a membrane to ATP hydrolysis
- An active transport pump may be a uniporter(one direction) or antiporter(2 direction)
- Move against concentration gradient (low to hight)
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