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Cell organelle and the cytoskeleton- Cell Biology

Why are cell membrane important

In order to difine the boundary of the cell and seperate the cytosol from the extracellular environment
Generation of electrical signals and ionic gradient for the movement of substances over the cell membrane

What does the cell membrane do

Delimit the semi autonomous fucntional unit
Control movement in and out the cell

Protection from external environment

Provide attachement sites

Function is cell Signalling

Why is the cell membrane always in motion

In order to allow the cell to take in food and excrete waste, to communicate with other cells, gather infomation about the environment, Repair damage

What is the Fluid Mosaic Model

Allows the membrane to develop fluidity and movement
It is mainly made up phospholipids that have a polar hydrophillic head that point outwards and then hydrophobic tails that point inwards in order to then create a pospholipid bilayer

There are also cholesterol and Proteins randomly located in the membrane as well as lipids

What is cholesterol needed for in the cell membrane

To regulate the rigidity of the cell membrane and to regulate communication between cells by the release and capturing of chemicals and proteins

How does cholesterol capture and release chemicals

It is able to capture chemicals by endocytosis where sections of the membrane engulf the chemicals and transport them to cells as vesicles
The Polar hydroxyl head of the cholesterol wil instert close to the polar head of the phospolipid

Only get cholesterol in animal cells

How does cholesterol regulate fluidity

At low temperature there is less Kinetic energy so then less movement in the phospholipids so they pack closer togetehr and form a crystaline state
At higher temperatures there is more Kinetic energy so then more phospholipid movement so they are packed less closely so then greater fluidity

Act as a buffer for fluidity at a changing temperature

Cis double bonds make it harder to pack together so hydrocarbons are spread out so a thinner bilayer if greater unsaturation

What do the proteins do in the cell membrane

Regulate what can enter and leave the cell
Non polar molecules can easily diffuse across the cell membrane by diffusion or active transport

Polar or charged molecules need transmembrane porteins in order to allow them to cross the membrane via a carrier or channel protein

What is the phospolipid structure in the cell membrane

In the hydrocarbon tails one of them is usually unsaturated so has a C=C bond to create a mink in the tail
The chain length and level of unsaturation will determine how closely the proteins canm pack together

What do the lipids in the cell membrane do

The lipids are self organsing in the membrane and it is energetically favourable to create a sealed environment so a bilayer is formed by them
Can also get glycolipids in the membrane

Can get formation of micelles when limited numbr of phospolipids have the heads exposed on the outside of the cell and tails are protected on the inside of the micelle in a circle formation

How do the phospolipids move in the cell membrane

Flip Flopping - There is movement of 2 phospholipids across the plane of the bilayer from one side to another
Flexion - When the phospholipid is able tom rotate by the movement of the hydrocarbon tail

Lateral diffusion- The swapping of places by 2 phospolipids that are next to each other

What are Lipid rafts

Not all domains of the bilayer have the same mobility level
Discrete membranes domain enriched in cholesterol and sphingolipids form rafts that can move laterally

Lipid rafts are associated with certain membrane proteins and are used for

Cell signalling and Uptake of extracellular molecules

What are the endomembrane organelles

These are organelle in the cell that have a membrane round them as well so are bilayered
Nuclear envelope, Golgi, ER, Vacuoles, Cell membranes, Vesicles and Lysosozomes

What is the nuclear envelope

It has a lipd bilayer and is contagious with the ER
Its role is too regulate movement in and out of the nucleus

It will break dowm during Prophase of mitosis

Has nuclear pores so is not a closed membrane

What is the nuclear pore

It is a complex of proteins that regukate movement in and out of the cell
It is highly selective of what can enter and leave the nucleus

What is the nuclear pore complex - NPC

Nuclear pore contain a NPC that is made up of 30NPC proteins to form octagonal symmetry
In each cell there are 3000-4000 NPC with each being able to move 500 macromolecules per second bilaterally

It can have bilaterlal directional as there are the movement of different things in different dircetion in the same pore

What will enter and leave the nucleus

DNA + RNA building blocks
Ribosomal proteins

Molecules used to provide energy


Ribsomal sub-units will move out the nucleus to form a working ribosome

What are the 2 signals used in the NPC

Nuclear localising signal - An amino acid that help to tag the a protein for entry into the nucleus
Nuclear export signal - An amino acid that tag a protein that is destined for leaving the nucleus

Why is the NPC important

Allow smaller molecules to move in and out of the cell
Allow the nucleus and cytoplasm to maintain there population of proteins in each area

Create the correct ribsome needed for protein synthesis

What is the endoplasmic reticulum ER

The rough ER have a ribosome coat so they are able to synthesize proteins but the smooth ER doesnt have this so can only synthesize lipids
The Rough ER used for transport and packaging of proteins to leave the cell

The smooth ER used for the synthesis of lipids as well as packingf them and transporting them out of the cell

What is co-translational protein import into the ER

The ribosome are able to bind to the rough ER and then the proteins are transported to the ER as they are being translated in the ribosome

What is postv translational protein import to the ER

The whole protein is translated before them being folded and being inserted to the rough ER membrane

How can a protein be imported to the ER

Transmembrane proteins are only able to partially translocate across the membrane to the ER
Water soluble proteins are able to fully translocate to the ER where they are then secreted or have a role in the ER lumen

What is cotransaltional transloaction steps into the ER

Require a signalling sequence from the ER and can only happen once ribsomke has bound to the tranlocator
An N-terminal signal peptide initastes the passage of the protein through the translocator

The single peptide is cleaved once the mature protein is fully synthesized

The mature protein now in the ER and then the ribsome unbind from the translocator

What is protein glycosylation

The addition of sugars to a protein in order to give certain proteins there function
This is done by precurose oligosaccharide tranferred from doliuchol lipid anchor that is a catalysed by oligosaccharide transferase enzyme

The trimming of the olgigosaccharide happens in the Golgi

What is the Golgi apparatus

Thye main site of carbohtydrate synthesis
Involved in the glycosylation of proteins and also in the sorting and dispatching of the proteins

There is an interconnected flattened cistae that is connected by a cis face on 1 side and a trans face on the other side of the Golgi

How do vesiccles move from the ER to the Golgi

Vesicles bud off from the ER at specialised points that have a COP 2 coat
The COP2 play a role in finding an exit or transport proteins that are needed for vesicle to form

If incorrect protein folding then they dont leave the ER

How do proteins get form the ER to the cis golgi face

COPII vesicles shed their coat and fuse to form the Vesicular tubulule cluster
This clustert then fuse with the cis Golgi

The KDEL receptor can retrive protein back to the ER via COPI ciat on the Golgi that is shed

How do proteins move through the Golgi

There is cisternal maturation model and the vesicle transport model
In cisternal they pass staright throught the flattened cistae area and in the vesicle they go in vesicles around the flattend cistae

What is glycosylation in the Golgi

Can get protein glycosylation where sugars for function are added or can bget removed and trimmed of compex sugar sidre chains added in the ER

What is the Cytosol made up of

Water, Vault Complexes, Protein Filament, cytoskeleton, Ribsome, Proteasomes
In the Cytoplasm there is Cytosol and the Cell organelle

What is the Mitochondria

They were orginally prokaryotic cells and they have a doyble membrane with highly folded inner membrane to increase surface area
They are mobile and associated with microtubules of the cytoskeleton due to this

They change shape and position

What is the structure of the mitochondria

Outer membrane - Include porins and membrane channels for very small molecules to enter
Intermembrane space

Inner membrane - Have cistae that are heavily folded and is the location of the electron transport chain and the creation of proton gradient to drive ATP synthase

Matrix - Enclosed space due to the cristae

Circular mitochondrial DNA

Granules

The intermembrane space is impermeable to electrons due to lipid cardiolipin so mitochomdria dont leak electron from ETC

What is mitochondrial fission

This is used to allow mitochondria to replicate and can also be used to remove unwanted waste or damage material from the mitochondria

How does the mitochondria produce ATP

Chemiosomosis - High energy electrons from the oxidation of food that are then moved along the ETC
Electrons lose energy doing this and are then released from the ETC and this causes H+ to be pumped across the membrane

Protion Gradient - H+ move back into the intermembrane space via channel protein coupled with ATP synthase so then ATP is produced

What is the electron transport chain

Can create a proton gradient by moving proton across tge inner mitochochondrial membrane
There is a 4 protein complex and at the very end 2 electron reduce oxygen to water

Oxygen is the final electron acceptor

What is the mitochondrial DNA

Evolve faster than genomic DNA but only code for 13 proteins in the human body with most being used to make ATP
Genes may have been moved from mitochondria to genomic DNA

It is usually maternally inherited so if mother has genetic defect in mitochondria 100% chance of being passed on

What are the Ribosomes

Prokaryotic ribosome is 70S made of a 50S unit and 30S unit
Eukaryotic ribosomes are 80S and made of 60S and 40S units

What are ribosomes made of

The larger and smaller sub units
Ribsomal proteins that make up the sub unit of the ribosome

Sub units also have rRNA in them

What do the Ribsomes do

Faciliate protein synthesis during translation of mRNA
This is done by binding to the codon of mRNA

There are 3 sites the E,P and A site in that order

a t-RNA that carry activasted from of amino acid bind to the A site and then move along all the sites

Ribsome can move along the mRNA chain until reach stop codon when ribosome will unbind and have a ful polypeptide made

What arev Ribsome inactivating proteins

Type 1 cant cross the cell membrane so can get into cell so cant inactivate the ribosomes
Type 2 can as they bond to B domain that allow them to cross into the cells so inactivate the ribosome

What are Perioxisomes

Have no DNA or ribosome in them
Proteins are imported from the cytosol

They contain oxiadative enzymes such as catalase and Urate oxidase, due to such large amount lead to cystalline core formation

How are perioxisomes and yeast linked together

Yeast grows on sugars that have small perioxisomes on them
Yeasy grown on methanol will have much larger perioxisomes that break down methanol

Yeast on fatty acids have larger perioxisomes on them that break fatty acids to acetly CoA

What reaction rely on perioxisomes to happen

RH2 + O2 --> R + H2O2 use oxygen to remove hydorgen atoms from organic substances
Important to make hydrogen peroxide for other reactions

Need to catalyse H2O2 due to toxic in the body to make 2H20 this is important for detoxification and breakdown of fatty acid to acetyl CoA

Perioxisomes are important for biogenesis and maturation

They are formed by the budding off from the ER
They then recruit key proteisn and enzymes needed thanks to PEX19 that is an import protein, by using a C terminal sequnce -SER-LYS-LEU

The sequence is too direct the proteins where they need to go like a postcode

What are the lysosomes

They contain many hydraulytic enzymes up to 40
They are involved in phagagcytosis and endocytosis where they engulf extracellular entities

Also carry our autophagy which is the digestion of self contents

What are endosomes

Intracellular sorting organelles, they are internalised from the extracellular space to form early endosomes
These then mature to late endosomes that then fuse with lysosomes

Golgi vesicles also fuse with endosomes to deliver material to lysosomes

Why wont the lysosome digest itself

A modified lipid membrane that have highly glycosylated proteins
Also membrane transporters that are able to remove recycle or excrete digestion products

Vacuolar H+ATPase to hydrolyse ATP and pump proton to lysosome

What are the Vault Complexes

There function is unknow but thought to be associated with NPC in the nuclear cytoplasmic transport system
mRNA localisation and cell signalling

Drug resistance

What is the structure of the Vault Complex

Large Ribonucleoprotein complexes
it is 3x larger than ribsomes

1 or several Vault RNA made of MVP, VPARP and TEP1

What are proteasomes used for

Allow the cell to produce correctly folded proteins, thsi is important as incorrect folding can lead to harmful proteins
They are able to destroy proteins that have been misfolded

Also important for rapid turnover of short lived proteins

What is the structure of proteasomes

They have a central hollow cylinder made of 4 stacked heptameric rings
Some of the proteins in the rings have proteasomal properties

Polyubiquitinylated proteins are targeted by them

What is the vacuole for

Fluid filled membrane bound organelle to maintian the internal pressure of the cell
Also for nutrient and waste storage

Can regulate the cell pH by pumping protons in and out the cell

What is the plant cell wall for

Give cell strenght to resist internal turgor pressure given out by the vacuole

What is the function of the cytoskeleton

Give the cell its shape and has the capacity to move or alter its shape
It organsisesthe the organelle and also transports them

It is used in cell divsion due to control chromosome organsisation and movement

What are the componenst of the cytoskeleton

Microfilamenst made up of actin
Intermediate filaments

Microtubules

The most abundant is the microfilament and the least is the microfilaments

What are the components of cytoskeleton made of

The microfilament and microtubule are made of sub-units that rapidly assemble and dissemble so they are very dynamic
Intermediate filaments are made of much more stable sub-units fibrous proteins

How are microfilamenst assembled

They are comprimised of linear assemblies of 43kDA actiin monomers and have 4 domain with a central cleft containing Ca2+ or MG2+

What is actin sub unit cycling

It needs ATP and ADP.
G actin, globular has a tighlty bound Ca2+ and non covalent ATP attached in its structure

G actin can polymersie to form F-actin fibrous, by the ATp being hydrolysed during polymerisation

F-actoin can then depolymeroise back to G actin where ADP is turned back to ATP

What is actin

It is a pear shaped molecule so has form of polarity so then in the polymer get a barbed end and a pointed end due to polarity
The barbed end is the + end as its easier for new monomer to be added at this end and so the pointed end is the - end due to need a conformationla change in the sub-unit before it can be added

What is the structure of the actin filmament

Has 2 strands of f-actin that are twisted together and the F actin has 1 Ca2+ ion and non covalent bonded ADP
Gte more elongation at barbed end due to easier to add sub-units

The sub-units added are G-actin due to being globular

Why is it good thgat cytoskeleton is dynamic

Helps in cells that need to move to or away from a stimuli
It can move by dissembling parts of the cytoskeleton and reassmble them at the opposite end of the cell so then push the cell membrane where it needs to go

What is microfilament synthesis caused by

ARP2 and ARP3 are similar to G actin but cant polymerise
They form an initiation complex and act as primer for actin polymerisation that can then recruit actin monomers and can elogngate the chain

ARP2/3 can bind to microfiliament to cause branching in the network as actin monomers will bind wherever the initiation complex is

How is the rate of elongation regulated

Controlled by thymosin that lead to less elomgation due to less actin monomers availble
Profilin lead to more elongation due to more G actin available

How is the microfilament regulated

Ca2+ dependent on the binding site of Gelsolin that cause cleave of the microfilament
This act as a primer for elongation

Gelsolin is freed by PIP2 that can make + end for rapid elongation

Gelsolin chop the microfilmanet in half so there are now 2 end that actin can be added to

How is microfilament association regulated

Filamin homodimers cross link microfilaments to form a gel like network
The crosslinking leads to bundling of microfilaments

What are the microtubules

There are 2 forms a-tubules and b-tubules the only difference is that a tubulue has bound GTP that wont hydrolyse and b-tubule may have GTP or GDP bound
They form a 110Kda heterodimer that act as the monomer to form the polymer

They are formed in the MTOC in centromere of the animal cells that have the mix of proteins being made like the y-tubulin ring that nucleate the microtubule growth, but in plant this can happen anywhere

How is microtubule assembly regulated

Polymerisation of free tubulin sub unit is energetically favourable
Stanthmim reduce the free pool of monomer so less elongation by bidning to the alpha or beta tubulin dimers so they cant be added to the polymer

How are microtubule stabilised

MAPs Protein allow crosslinking of Microtubule to stabilise them by packing them closer together

What are intermediate filmaments

There is no elomgation or shrinking so are non-dynamic
The omnly way to remove them is by digesting them and can only be made by transcribing the right gene

They are least soluble part of the cytoskeleton and are used for structural support in the cell

What are the intermediate filaments made up of

They are made up of fibrous polypeptides that assemble with side by side to give filament a high tensile strength
There are non-helical regions that stabilse the filament and intercat with other cytoplasm componets

Intermediate filamen are not active due to

No cellular pool for sub unit monomers that can be polymerised
No evdience for dynamic equilibrium between polymerised and soluble forms of intermediate filaments

The number and lenght if them are controlled by their degradation as they can be broken down by proteases which is controlled by cell

Why are the intermediate filament cell specific

Due to each IF will play a different role within the cell meaning overall function of IF will be cell specific

What does the cytoskeleton allow to move

Organelle, vesicles
Mitochondria - they move form stationary in a linear direction in short bursts so they move along the cytoskeleetal elemenst

Cellulose biosynthesis in plamnts the portien compex move in a linear fashion, this is controlled by CSA complex in a rosette structure

The complex move through plasma membrane in linear fashion

How does movement occur along the microtubule

Microtubule use ATP derived energt and are proteinsthat are able to move in a direction of fashion
There are 2 major groups of these proteins:= Kinesins that move to the + end of the microtubules and dyneins that move to the - end of the microtubule and so motor can move in both direction

The motor proteins can carry cargo from start to finish such as organelle and vesicles and used in positioning of daughter chromatid along mitotic spindles

What are the 2 confromations that the motor proteins do in walking

1 is where the motor protein is stabilised by binding to the ATP and the other one is where it is stabilised by binding to ADP
The microtubule provide a trackway for their to be movement of things from source to sink

What is the microtubule role in axons

Carry neurotransmitters from the cell body to the axon where they are released to trigger anterograde transport
Movement from the axon towards the cell body is called retergrade transport

What are the motor protein chrarcteristics

Globular head region - engege the filament and activly move along it
Tail region- Attatchement point of motor protein and cargo

Walking - Way to describe motor protein movement

Power stroke - ATP hydrolysis cause conformational change so the head is thrust back creating tension so lift the tail and move it along it forward with the cargo

Recovery stroke - Occur when protein loosely attached to the filament and the head slides along by thermal diffusion

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