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Prokaryotes - ANS ✔✔- single-celled organisms that do not have a membrane-bound nucleus
- characterized by lack of nucleus
- fungi, protozoa, most algae
- cyanobacteria, bacteria, and rickettsiae
Eukaryotes - ANS ✔✔- multicellular organisms with membrane bound organelles
- cells of higher animals and plants
- more extensive intracellular anatomy and organization
Proks. vs. euks. - ANS ✔✔1. structural differences
2. chemical composition
3. biochemical activity
4. protein production / synthesis
5. mechanisms of transport across outer cellular membrane
6. enzyme content
nuclei (proks.) - ANS ✔✔carry genetic info in sngle ciruclar chromosome
- lack histone
histones - ANS ✔✔in euk. cells, binds DNA and are involved in supercoiling of DNA
Differentiation - ANS ✔✔(maturation) process of cell specialization
,- some cells perform one kind of function and other cells perform other functions
The eight chief cellular functions - ANS ✔✔1. movement
2. conductivity
3. metabolic absorption
4. secretion
5. excretion
6. respiration
7. reproduction
8. communication
[chief cellular functions] movement - ANS ✔✔muscle cells generate forces that produce motion
[chief cellular functions] conductivity - ANS ✔✔conduction as a response to stimulus
manifested by wave of excitation, an electrical potential that passes along surface of cell to
reach its other parts
- chief function of nerve cells
[chief cellular functions] metabolic absorption - ANS ✔✔all cells can take in and use nutrients
and other substances from surroundings
[chief cellular functions] secretion - ANS ✔✔some cells, like mucous gland cells, can synthesize
new substances from substances they absorb and then secrete new substances to serve, as
needed, elsewhere
[chief cellular functions] Excretion - ANS ✔✔all cells can rid themselves of waste products
resulting from metabolic breakdown of nutrients
,- lysosomes; contain enzymes that break down, or digest, large molecules, turning them into
waste products that are released from cell
[chief cellular functions] respiration - ANS ✔✔cells absorb oxygen, used to transform nutrients
into energy in the form of ATP
- mitochondria: location for cellular respiration, or oxidation
[chief cellular functions] reproduction - ANS ✔✔tissue growth occurs as cells enlarge and
reproduce themselves
- tissue maintenance requires that new cells be produced to replace cells that're normally lost
through cellular death
- not all cells capable of continuous division
[chief cellular functions] communication - ANS ✔✔vital for cells to survive as a society of cells
- allows for maintenance of dynamic steady state
plasma membrane - ANS ✔✔outer surface that regulates entrance and exit of molecules
cytoplasm - ANS ✔✔A jellylike fluid inside the cell in which the organelles are suspended
organelles - ANS ✔✔membrane-enclosed structures within eukaryotic cells
nucleus - ANS ✔✔- the largest membrane bound organelle
- contains...
1. nuclear envelope: pockmarked with nuclear pores
2. nuclear pores: allow chemical messages to exit/enter nucleus
3. nucleolus: small dense structure composed largely of RNA
, 4. most of cellular DNA
5. DNA binding-proteins (histones)
- primary functions: cell division, control of genetic information
- other functions: replication and repair of DNA and the transcription of the information stored
in DNA
chromatin - ANS ✔✔material made of DNA in association with histones
chromatid - ANS ✔✔
cytosol - ANS ✔✔
glycocalyx - ANS ✔✔
glycolipid - ANS ✔✔
glycoprotein - ANS ✔✔
spindle fiber - ANS ✔✔
proteostasis - ANS ✔✔state of cell balance of processes of protein synthesis, folding, and
dehydration
- depends on how quickly proteins are made, how long they survive, or when they are broken
down
proteolytic systems - ANS ✔✔1. lysosomes
2. ubiquitin-proteasome (UPS)