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Summary Cell biology

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Escrito en
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Summary of lectures covering cell biology, succinct with visuals.

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Escuela, estudio y materia

Institución
Grado

Información del documento

Subido en
10 de octubre de 2022
Número de páginas
26
Escrito en
2022/2023
Tipo
Resumen

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Introduction to microscopy
Wednesday, 20 April 2022 13:28



Visible Light
• 400nm-700nm




Resolving power of the eye (limit)
• Rpeye = 0.1mm
• i.e. beyond this is invisible to our eyes




Simple lens Compound microscope
• Limit : < 6-10 fold magnification
 Two-stage magnification : objective & eyepiece
 Objective - magnifies + focuses; forms primary image
 Eyepiece - magnified virtual image on retina of eye



Monocular vs Binocular Microscopes

Carry microscope upright (prevents eyepieces from falling out)




Condenser • Focus light onto the specimen
• Match the NA of objective
Objective lens • Oil immersion (high power objective-usually 100X), oil medium to focus light
• Parfocal i.e. microscope that stays approx. in focus when magnification changes



Numerical Aperture



• ↑ NA = ↑ RESOLUTION
• n-refractive index of medium between specimen and the objective
• µ-half cone of light entering the objective
• N.A. = n sin µ




Cell biology Page 1

, • ↑ NA = ↑ RESOLUTION
• n-refractive index of medium between specimen and the objective
• µ-half cone of light entering the objective
• N.A. = n sin µ




N.A. max = 1.4 (oil objective)
R = 0.61λ/N.A; increase resolution use light with shortest wavelength



Field of view
Area seen through a lens and varies with magnification

Total magnification = Mobjective × Meyepiece

Steps in tissue processing




Fixation Preserve structure to state resembling original living state; avoid artifacts
Dehydration Ethanol and acetone (e.g.) ; gradual increase in []; water content reduced
Infiltration Xylene and paraffin wax
Embedding Supports thin sectioning e.g. paraffin wax
Sectioning Provides thin sections for examinations, collected onto glass slides from water
Staining Visual contrast to identify tissue components



Why do we stain sections?
• Cells are transparent
• Stain confer contrast thus making tissue visible
• Identify structures




Basophilic Acidophilic
• Basic stained structures • Acid stained structures
• e.g. chromatin, ribosomes • e.g. collagen fibres, RBC, muscle filaments, mitochondria
• Turn red/pink (H&E)



• Hematoxylin (basic dye) stains acidic components of cells blue (basophilia)
• Eosin (acidic dye) stains basic components of cells pink (acidphilia)




Artifacts
-alters natural appearance of cells

Precursors
• Fixation artifacts
• Cell shrink or swell
• Compression or stretching=extracellular space distorted
• Scores, ripples, wrinkles



Cell biology Page 2

, Introduction to histology
Wednesday, 20 April 2022 08:53


Introduction to histology
Tuesday, 19 April 2022
14:38


Tissues = cells + extracellular matrix (mutually dependent)
ECM-mechanical structural support, transports nutrients to cell ,carry metabolised and secretory products away from cell




Types of Cells


Nerve Blood Muscle Fat




Muscles Tissue
• Muscle cells = muscles tissues (active contractile tissue)
• Function-produce force, cause motion (locomotion/movement within internal organs)

Description Function Location
Smooth Spindle-shaped cells with Propels substances or objects along Walls of hollow
muscle central nuclei, no internal passageways, involuntary control organs
(visceral) striations, cells arranged
closely to form sheets
Skeletal Long, cylindrical, Voluntary movement, locomotion, Attached to bones
muscle multinucleate cells, manipulation of enviro. , facial expression, or occasionally skin
obvious striations voluntary control
Cardiac Branching, striated, As it contracts, it propels blood into the Walls of heart
muscle generally uninucleate cells circulation; involuntary control
Neural Tissue
• CNS (brain & spinal cord) + peripheral nervous system (cranial nerves, spinal nerves)
• Function: transmit electrical signals from sensory receptors to effectors
• Location: brain, spinal cord and nerves

Epithelia


Cell biology Page 3
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