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Summary - Cell Biology and Neuroscience (4BBY1030)

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A comprehensive, highly detailed summary of the Kings College London Cell Biology and Neuroscience module (4BBY1030), one of the core modules taken in 'Common Year One' of courses such as Biomedical Science, Neuroscience and Biochemistry in the Faculty of Life Sciences and Medicine. The summary covers all the lectures in depth, as well as extra reading from core textbooks already incorporated into the notes, so no extra work is needed to obtain the highest marks. I memorised this document alone and placed first in the year with 87% in the exam! Topics covered include cell types, organelles, cell signalling, transport, mitosis, neurones, glia, development, embryology, cell cycle, neurodegeneration, and electrophysiology/action potentials. It would therefore also be relevant for anyone studying foundational life sciences from medical students to nursing trainees etc.

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Uploaded on
August 18, 2025
Number of pages
36
Written in
2022/2023
Type
Summary

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cell biology + neuroscience
Created @December 6, 2022 1:00 PM

Reviewed

Cell types and subcellular structures

describe the concept of the cell

defining features = membrane, genetic info, metabolism

cell theory = new cells come from existing cells dividing, smallest basic
unit of life, all living organisms one or more cells

classify different types of cells: prokaryotes, eukaryotes, bacteria, archaea,
fungi, plants, animals

prokaryotes - bacteria (including cyanobacteria) and archaea (extreme
environments eg. halophiles high salt, thermoacidophiles hot/sulfur) =
unicellular, no nucleus

eukaryotes - plants (including algae), animals, fungi (including yeast),
protozoa) = can be multicellular, nucleus

outline the basic organisation of eukaryotic cells and give a brief description
of the major eukaryotic cell organelles and the specialised cellular processes
that take place in them: plasma membrane, nucleus, rough and smooth
endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus, lysosomes and peroxisomes,
mitochondria and chloroplasts, cytosol, cytoskeleton
plasma membrane

structure - amphipathic phospholipid bilayer, transmembrane proteins,
cholesterol for fluidity, dynamic lipid rafts

roles - communication, barrier, import/export, cell shape, electrical
capacitor

nucleus




cell biology + neuroscience 1

, structure - pored, double-layer lipid membrane (aka envelope) + nucleolus
(location of ribosome and SRP synthesis, gene regulatory protein
capture/detention) + nucleoplasm

roles - holds genetic info in form of DNA as chromosomes/histones/gene
regulatory proteins, site of RNA synthesis/processing

endoplasmic reticulum

structure - interconnected vesicles (cisternae) consistent with nuclear
membrane

a. rough - ribosomes embedded in membrane = site of secreted and
transmembrane protein synthesis, stained by nissl, abundant in secretory
cells

b. smooth - lipid/cholesterol/steroid hormones synthesis, detox and release
of glucose (in liver)

golgi apparatus

structure - flattened membrane bound stack of vesicles

roles - proteins modified and packaged into vesicles for export
(secretion/transmembrane embedding)

lysosomes (animal cells only)

structure - membrane bound vesicles, acidic pH (4.5) optimum for
degradative hydrolytic enzymes

roles - degrade unwanted proteins/membrane/organelles/pathogens (act
as macrophages)

perioxisomes

roles - oxidative degradation of non proteins: fatty acids (into precursors
and H2O2 - neutralised by catalase) and toxins eg. ethanol

mitochondria

structure - double membrane, inner membranefolded into cristae with
more transmembrane proteins embedded, 1um thick, circular DNA
(alternative genetic code to nuclDNA) and ribosomes in matrix, make up
up to 25% cytoplasm


cell biology + neuroscience 2

, roles - respiration (oxidative phosphorylation/TCA cycle), heat production,
apoptosis, Ca 2+ regulation/storage

chloroplasts

similar to mitochondria but only in plants - photosynthesis

cytoskeleton

structure - protein fibre network = intermediate filaments + microtubules +
actin/micro filaments

roles - structure/shape, movement within cell and of whole cell, cell
division, transport in cell

cytosol

structure - aqueous solution, set pH 7.2 and ion conc

contains - ions, ribosomes, tRNAs, transport proteins, enzymes,
messengers, glycogen, inclusion bodies

Cells in their environment

speculate on the origins of cellular life forms on earth

timeline: ancestral prokaryotes 4bill yrs ago > 1.5bill yrs bacteria, archaea
(no organelles, only one cell compartment, extreme environments and
energy sources, fast inaccurate reproduction, variety and specialisations
eg. flagella) > anaerobic ancestral eukaryote

origins of last universal common ancestor: chemicals + minerals (HCHO,
HCN, cyanamide, glyceraldehyde, PO4) acting as catalysts + high temp >
formed simple RNA > increased complexity and ribozymes for self
replication > stabler DNA to pass genetic info down generations >
spontaneous lipid bilayers, ribosomes to make proteins

endosymbiotic theory - bacteria engulfed by ancestral eukaryotic cell =
mitochondria (chloroplast in plants), bacteria protected and in return
eukaryote gets energy

chlorophyll photosynthesis: type 1 (green sulfur and heliobacteria), 2
(purple/green filamentous), cyanobacteria

explain the concept of cellular specialisation in the context of multicellularity


cell biology + neuroscience 3

, within multicellular organism, specialisation = different roles of different
cells

‘ex ovo omnia’ - everything from egg

colonial green alga = two cell types, differentiated somatic and germ

provide an overview of cellular and subcellular pathogens

cellular - bacteria (cholera, MRSA, cyanobacteria), fungi (candida,
athletes foot, cryptococcus, valley fever), protozoa (eg. malaria,
toxoplasmosis, giardiasis) (not archaea)

subcellular - virus = DNA/RNA + protein coat (sometimes lipid envelope) -
require host cell to reproduce (outside = virion), need electronmicroscope
to see, can lie dormant (herpes, varicella) or be retro/lenti (HIV)

protozoa = single cell eukaryotes, roles in motility/predation

Cytoskeleton

the terms microtubule, microfilament, intermediate filament

microtubule - 25nm hollow tubes

transport within cell, mitotic spindle, cilia

IF - 10nm filaments in bundles through cell

cytoplasmic = vimetin (connective, muscle, glia), neurofilaments
(nerves), keratins (epithelia, a helices coiled coil
dimers>tetramers>eight in filament, mutations = EB blisters)

or nuclear (nuclear lamins, in all animals)

microfilaments - 7nm coils

movement and shape of cell (eg. microvilli), force, cell division

the structure and polymerisation of actin and the function of myosin

actin structure = 375 AAs, 55kDa monomer with 2 domains, g globular,
binds ATP, fibres near membrane, all eukaryotes, most abundant protein

mutations = muscular dystrophy, haemolytic anemia




cell biology + neuroscience 4
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