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The Working Cell

  • Introduction

    • Some organisms use an energy-converting reaction to produce light in a process called bioluminescence

      • Many marine invertebrates and fishes use bioluminescence to hide themselves from predators

      • Scientists estimate that 90% of deep-sea marine life produces bioluminescence

    • The light is produced from chemical reactions that convert chemical energy into visible light

    • Bioluminescence is an example of the multitude of energy conversions that a cell can perform

    • Many of the cell’s reactions

      • Take place in organelles

      • Use enzymes embedded in the membranes of the these organelles

  • Membranes are fluid mosaics of lipids and proteins with many functions

    • Membranes are composed of

      • A bilayer of phospholipids with embedded and attached proteins in a structure biologists call a fluid mosaic

    • Membrane proteins perform many functions

      • Some proteins help maintain cell shape and coordinate changes inside and outside the cell through their attachment to the cytoskeleton and extracellular matrix

      • Some proteins function as receptors for chemical messengers from other cells

      • Some membrane proteins function as enzymes

      • Some membrane glycoproteins are involved in cell-cell recognition

      • Membrane proteins may participate in the intercellular junctions that attach adjacent cells to each other

      • Membranes may exhibit selective permeability, allowing some substances to cross more easily than others

  • Membranes form spontaneously, a critical step in the origin of life

    • Phospholipids spontaneously self-assemble into simple membranes

    • The formation of membrane-enclosed collections of molecules was a critical step in the evolution of the first cells

  • Passive transport is diffusion across a membrane with no energy investment

    • Diffusion is the tendency of particles to spread out evenly in available spaces

      • Particles move from an area of more concentrated particles to an area where they are less concentrated

      • This means that particles diffuse down their concentration gradient

      • Eventually, the particles reach equilibrium where the concentration of particles is the same throughout

    • Diffusion, across a cell membrane does not require energy, so it is called passive transport

    • The concentration gradient itself represents potential energy for diffusion

  • Osmosis is the diffusion of water across a membrane

    • One of the most important substances that crosses membranes is water

    • The diffusion of water across a selectively permeable membrane is called osmosis

    • If a membrane is permeable to water, but not a solute, separates two solutions with different concentrations of solute

      • Water will cross the membrane, moving down its own gradient until the solute concentration on both sides is equal

  • Water balance between cells and their surrounding is crucial to organisms

    • Tonicity is a term that describes the ability of a solution to cause a cell to gain or lose water

    • Tonicity mostly depends on the concentration of solute on both sides of the membrane

    • How will animal cells be affected when placed into solutions of various tonicities?

      • Isotonic solution

        • The concentration of solute is the same on both sides of the membrane

        • The cell volume will not change

      • Hypotonic solution

        • The solute concentration is lower outside the cell

        • Water molecules move into the cell and the cell will expand

      • Hypertonic Solution

        • The solute concentration is higher outside the cell

        • Water molecules move out of the cell and the cell will shrink

    • For an animal cell to survive in a hypotonic or hypertonic environment, it must engage in osmoregulation

      • The control of water balance

    • The cell walls of plant cells, prokaryotes, and fungi make water balance issues somewhat different

      • The cell wall of a plant cell exerts pressure that prevents the cell from taking in too much water and bursting when placed in a hypotonic environment

      • In a hypertonic environment, plant and animal cells both shrivel

  • Transport proteins can facilitate diffusion across membranes

    • Hydrophobic substances easily diffuse across a cell membrane

    • Polar or charged substances do not easily cross cell membranes, and, instead, move across membranes with the help of specific proteins in a process called facilitated diffusions

      • Does not require energy

      • Relies on the concentration gradients

    • Some proteins function by becoming a hydrophilic tunnel for the passage of ions or other molecules

    • Other proteins bind their passenger, change shape, and release their passenger on the other side

    • Because water is polar, its diffusion through a membrane’s hydrophobic interior is relatively slow

    • The very rapid diffusion of water into and out of certain cells is made possible by a protein channel called an aquaporin

  • Research on another membrane protein led to the discovery of aquaporins

    • Dr. Peter Agre received the 2003 Nobel Prize in chemistry for his discovery of aquaporins

    • His research on the Rh protein used in blood typing led to this discovery

  • Cells expend energy in the active transport of a solute

    • In active transport, a cell must expend energy to move a solute against its concentration gradient

  • Exocytosis and endocytosis transport large molecules across membranes

    • A cell uses two mechanisms to move large molecules across membranes

      • Exocytosis

        • Used to export bulky molecules, such as proteins or polysaccharides

      • Endocytosis

        • Import substances useful to the livelihood of the cell

    • In both cases, material to be transported is packaged within a vesicle that fuses with the membrane

  • Three kinds of endocytosis

    • Phagocytosis

      • Engulfment of a particle by wrapping cell membrane around it, forming a vacuole

    • Pinocytosis

      • Same thing as phagocytosis except fluids are taken into small vesicles

    • Receptor-mediated endocytosis

      • Uses receptors in a receptor-coated pit to interact with a specific protein, initiating the formation of a vesicle

  • Cells transform energy as they perform work

    • Cells are small units, a chemical factory, housing thousands of chemical reactions

    • Cells uses these reactions for cell maintenance, manufacturing of cellular parts, and cell replication

    • Energy is the capacity to cause change or to perform work

    • There are two kinds of energy

      • Kinetic energy

        • Energy of motion

      • Potential energy

        • Energy that matter possesses as a result of its location or structure

    • Heat, or thermal energy, is a type of kinetic energy associated with the random movement of atoms or molecules

    • Light is also a type of kinetic energy, and can be harnessed to power photosynthesis

    • Chemical energy is the potential energy available for release in a chemical reaction

      • It is the most important type of energy for living organisms to power the work of the cell

    • Thermodynamics is the study of energy transformations that occur in a collection of matter

      • Scientists use the word

        • System for the matter under study

        • Surroundings for the rest of the universe

    • Two laws govern energy transformations in organisms

      • First law of thermodynamics

        • Energy in the universe is constant

      • Second law of thermodynamics

        • Energy conversions increase the disorder of the universe

    • Entropy

      • The measure of disorder, or randomness

    • Cells use oxygen in reactions that release energy from fuel molecules

    • In cellular respiration, the chemical energy stored in organic molecules is converted to a form that the cell can use to perform work

  • Chemical reactions either release or store

    • Chemical reactions either release energy (exergonic reactions) or require an input of energy and store energy (endergonic reactions)

    • Exergonic reactions release energy

      • These reactions release the energy in covalent bonds of the reactants

      • Burning woods releases energy in glucose as heat and light

      • Cellular respiration involves many steps, releases energy slowly, and uses some of the released energy to produce ATP

    • An endergonic reaction

      • Requires an input of energy and yields products rich in potential energy

    • Endergonic reactions

      • Begin with reactant molecules that contain relatively little potential energy

      • End with products that contain more chemical energy

    • Photosynthesis is a type of endergonic process

      • Energy-poor reactants, carbon dioxide, and water are used

      • Energy is absorbed from sunlight

      • Energy-rich sugar molecules are produced

    • A living organism carries out thousands of endergonic and exergonic chemical reactions

    • The total of an organism’s chemical reaction is called metabolism

    • A metabolic pathway is a series of chemical reactions that either

      • Builds a complex molecule

      • Breaks down a complex molecule into simpler compounds

    • Energy coupling uses the energy release from exergonic reactions to drive essential endergonic reactions, usually using the stored ATP molecules

  • ATP drives cellular work by coupling exergonic and endergonic reactions

    • Adenosine triphosphate

    • Powers nearly all forms of cellular work

    • ATP consists of

      • Nitrogenous bases adenine

      • Five carbon sugar ribose

      • Three phosphate groups

    • Hydrolysis of ATP releases energy by transferring the third phosphate from ATP to some other molecule in a process called phosphorylation

    • Most cellular work depends on ATP energizing molecules by phosphorylating them

    • There are three main types of cellular work

      • Chemical

      • Mechanical

      • Transport

    • ATP drives all three of these types of work

    • ATP is a renewable source of energy for the cell

    • In the ATP cycle, energy released in an exergonic reaction, such as the breakdown of glucose, is used in an endergonic reaction to generate ATP

  • Enzymes speed up the cell’s chemical reactions by lowering energy barriers

    • Although biological molecules possess much potential energy, it is not released spontaneously

      • An energy barrier must be overcome before a chemical reaction can begin

        • This energy is called the activation energy

    • We can think of the activation energy as the amount of energy needed for a reactant molecule to move uphill to a higher energy but an unstable state, so that the downhill part of the reaction can begin

      • One way to speed up a reaction is to add heat, which agitates atoms so that bonds break more easily and reactions can proceed, but could kill a cell

    • Enzymes

      • Function as a biological catalyst by lowering the activation energy needed for a reaction to begin

      • Increase the rate of a reaction without being consumed by the reaction

      • Are usually proteins

        • Although some RNA molecules can function as enzymes

  • A specific enzyme catalyzes each cellular reaction

    • An enzyme is very selective in the reaction it catalyzes and has a shape that determines the enzyme’s specificity

    • The specific reactant that an enzyme acts on is called the enzyme’s substrate

      • A substrate fits into a region of the enzyme called the active site

    • Enzymes are specific substrate molecules

    • For every enzyme, there are optimal conditions under which it is most effective

    • Temperature affects molecular motion

      • An enzyme’s optimal temperature produces the highest rate of contact between the reactants and the enzyme’s active site

    • Most human enzymes work best at 35-40℃

    • Many enzymes require nonprotein helpers called cofactors, which bind to the active site and function in catalysis

    • Some cofactors are inorganic

      • Ex: zinc, iron, copper

    • If a cofactor is an organic molecule, such as most vitamins, it is called a coenzyme

  • Enzyme inhibitors can regulate enzyme activity in the cell

    • A chemical that interferes with an enzyme’s activity is called an inhibitor

    • Competitive inhibitors

      • Block substrates from entering the active site

      • Reduce the enzyme’s productivity

    • Noncompetitive inhibitors

      • Bind to the enzyme somewhere other than the active site

      • Change the shape of the active site

      • Prevent the substrate from binding

    • Enzyme inhibitors are important in regulating cell metabolism

    • In some reactions, the product may act as an inhibitor of one of the enzymes in the pathway that produced it

      • This is called feedback inhibition

  • Many drugs, pesticides, and poisons are enzyme inhibitors

    • Many beneficial drugs act as enzyme inhibitors

      • Ibuprofen

        • Inhibiting the productions of prostaglandins

      • Some blood pressure medications

      • Some antidepressants

      • Many antibiotics

      • Protease inhibitors used to fight HIV

    • Enzyme inhibitors have also been developed as pesticides and deadly poisons for chemical warfare

NE

The Working Cell

  • Introduction

    • Some organisms use an energy-converting reaction to produce light in a process called bioluminescence

      • Many marine invertebrates and fishes use bioluminescence to hide themselves from predators

      • Scientists estimate that 90% of deep-sea marine life produces bioluminescence

    • The light is produced from chemical reactions that convert chemical energy into visible light

    • Bioluminescence is an example of the multitude of energy conversions that a cell can perform

    • Many of the cell’s reactions

      • Take place in organelles

      • Use enzymes embedded in the membranes of the these organelles

  • Membranes are fluid mosaics of lipids and proteins with many functions

    • Membranes are composed of

      • A bilayer of phospholipids with embedded and attached proteins in a structure biologists call a fluid mosaic

    • Membrane proteins perform many functions

      • Some proteins help maintain cell shape and coordinate changes inside and outside the cell through their attachment to the cytoskeleton and extracellular matrix

      • Some proteins function as receptors for chemical messengers from other cells

      • Some membrane proteins function as enzymes

      • Some membrane glycoproteins are involved in cell-cell recognition

      • Membrane proteins may participate in the intercellular junctions that attach adjacent cells to each other

      • Membranes may exhibit selective permeability, allowing some substances to cross more easily than others

  • Membranes form spontaneously, a critical step in the origin of life

    • Phospholipids spontaneously self-assemble into simple membranes

    • The formation of membrane-enclosed collections of molecules was a critical step in the evolution of the first cells

  • Passive transport is diffusion across a membrane with no energy investment

    • Diffusion is the tendency of particles to spread out evenly in available spaces

      • Particles move from an area of more concentrated particles to an area where they are less concentrated

      • This means that particles diffuse down their concentration gradient

      • Eventually, the particles reach equilibrium where the concentration of particles is the same throughout

    • Diffusion, across a cell membrane does not require energy, so it is called passive transport

    • The concentration gradient itself represents potential energy for diffusion

  • Osmosis is the diffusion of water across a membrane

    • One of the most important substances that crosses membranes is water

    • The diffusion of water across a selectively permeable membrane is called osmosis

    • If a membrane is permeable to water, but not a solute, separates two solutions with different concentrations of solute

      • Water will cross the membrane, moving down its own gradient until the solute concentration on both sides is equal

  • Water balance between cells and their surrounding is crucial to organisms

    • Tonicity is a term that describes the ability of a solution to cause a cell to gain or lose water

    • Tonicity mostly depends on the concentration of solute on both sides of the membrane

    • How will animal cells be affected when placed into solutions of various tonicities?

      • Isotonic solution

        • The concentration of solute is the same on both sides of the membrane

        • The cell volume will not change

      • Hypotonic solution

        • The solute concentration is lower outside the cell

        • Water molecules move into the cell and the cell will expand

      • Hypertonic Solution

        • The solute concentration is higher outside the cell

        • Water molecules move out of the cell and the cell will shrink

    • For an animal cell to survive in a hypotonic or hypertonic environment, it must engage in osmoregulation

      • The control of water balance

    • The cell walls of plant cells, prokaryotes, and fungi make water balance issues somewhat different

      • The cell wall of a plant cell exerts pressure that prevents the cell from taking in too much water and bursting when placed in a hypotonic environment

      • In a hypertonic environment, plant and animal cells both shrivel

  • Transport proteins can facilitate diffusion across membranes

    • Hydrophobic substances easily diffuse across a cell membrane

    • Polar or charged substances do not easily cross cell membranes, and, instead, move across membranes with the help of specific proteins in a process called facilitated diffusions

      • Does not require energy

      • Relies on the concentration gradients

    • Some proteins function by becoming a hydrophilic tunnel for the passage of ions or other molecules

    • Other proteins bind their passenger, change shape, and release their passenger on the other side

    • Because water is polar, its diffusion through a membrane’s hydrophobic interior is relatively slow

    • The very rapid diffusion of water into and out of certain cells is made possible by a protein channel called an aquaporin

  • Research on another membrane protein led to the discovery of aquaporins

    • Dr. Peter Agre received the 2003 Nobel Prize in chemistry for his discovery of aquaporins

    • His research on the Rh protein used in blood typing led to this discovery

  • Cells expend energy in the active transport of a solute

    • In active transport, a cell must expend energy to move a solute against its concentration gradient

  • Exocytosis and endocytosis transport large molecules across membranes

    • A cell uses two mechanisms to move large molecules across membranes

      • Exocytosis

        • Used to export bulky molecules, such as proteins or polysaccharides

      • Endocytosis

        • Import substances useful to the livelihood of the cell

    • In both cases, material to be transported is packaged within a vesicle that fuses with the membrane

  • Three kinds of endocytosis

    • Phagocytosis

      • Engulfment of a particle by wrapping cell membrane around it, forming a vacuole

    • Pinocytosis

      • Same thing as phagocytosis except fluids are taken into small vesicles

    • Receptor-mediated endocytosis

      • Uses receptors in a receptor-coated pit to interact with a specific protein, initiating the formation of a vesicle

  • Cells transform energy as they perform work

    • Cells are small units, a chemical factory, housing thousands of chemical reactions

    • Cells uses these reactions for cell maintenance, manufacturing of cellular parts, and cell replication

    • Energy is the capacity to cause change or to perform work

    • There are two kinds of energy

      • Kinetic energy

        • Energy of motion

      • Potential energy

        • Energy that matter possesses as a result of its location or structure

    • Heat, or thermal energy, is a type of kinetic energy associated with the random movement of atoms or molecules

    • Light is also a type of kinetic energy, and can be harnessed to power photosynthesis

    • Chemical energy is the potential energy available for release in a chemical reaction

      • It is the most important type of energy for living organisms to power the work of the cell

    • Thermodynamics is the study of energy transformations that occur in a collection of matter

      • Scientists use the word

        • System for the matter under study

        • Surroundings for the rest of the universe

    • Two laws govern energy transformations in organisms

      • First law of thermodynamics

        • Energy in the universe is constant

      • Second law of thermodynamics

        • Energy conversions increase the disorder of the universe

    • Entropy

      • The measure of disorder, or randomness

    • Cells use oxygen in reactions that release energy from fuel molecules

    • In cellular respiration, the chemical energy stored in organic molecules is converted to a form that the cell can use to perform work

  • Chemical reactions either release or store

    • Chemical reactions either release energy (exergonic reactions) or require an input of energy and store energy (endergonic reactions)

    • Exergonic reactions release energy

      • These reactions release the energy in covalent bonds of the reactants

      • Burning woods releases energy in glucose as heat and light

      • Cellular respiration involves many steps, releases energy slowly, and uses some of the released energy to produce ATP

    • An endergonic reaction

      • Requires an input of energy and yields products rich in potential energy

    • Endergonic reactions

      • Begin with reactant molecules that contain relatively little potential energy

      • End with products that contain more chemical energy

    • Photosynthesis is a type of endergonic process

      • Energy-poor reactants, carbon dioxide, and water are used

      • Energy is absorbed from sunlight

      • Energy-rich sugar molecules are produced

    • A living organism carries out thousands of endergonic and exergonic chemical reactions

    • The total of an organism’s chemical reaction is called metabolism

    • A metabolic pathway is a series of chemical reactions that either

      • Builds a complex molecule

      • Breaks down a complex molecule into simpler compounds

    • Energy coupling uses the energy release from exergonic reactions to drive essential endergonic reactions, usually using the stored ATP molecules

  • ATP drives cellular work by coupling exergonic and endergonic reactions

    • Adenosine triphosphate

    • Powers nearly all forms of cellular work

    • ATP consists of

      • Nitrogenous bases adenine

      • Five carbon sugar ribose

      • Three phosphate groups

    • Hydrolysis of ATP releases energy by transferring the third phosphate from ATP to some other molecule in a process called phosphorylation

    • Most cellular work depends on ATP energizing molecules by phosphorylating them

    • There are three main types of cellular work

      • Chemical

      • Mechanical

      • Transport

    • ATP drives all three of these types of work

    • ATP is a renewable source of energy for the cell

    • In the ATP cycle, energy released in an exergonic reaction, such as the breakdown of glucose, is used in an endergonic reaction to generate ATP

  • Enzymes speed up the cell’s chemical reactions by lowering energy barriers

    • Although biological molecules possess much potential energy, it is not released spontaneously

      • An energy barrier must be overcome before a chemical reaction can begin

        • This energy is called the activation energy

    • We can think of the activation energy as the amount of energy needed for a reactant molecule to move uphill to a higher energy but an unstable state, so that the downhill part of the reaction can begin

      • One way to speed up a reaction is to add heat, which agitates atoms so that bonds break more easily and reactions can proceed, but could kill a cell

    • Enzymes

      • Function as a biological catalyst by lowering the activation energy needed for a reaction to begin

      • Increase the rate of a reaction without being consumed by the reaction

      • Are usually proteins

        • Although some RNA molecules can function as enzymes

  • A specific enzyme catalyzes each cellular reaction

    • An enzyme is very selective in the reaction it catalyzes and has a shape that determines the enzyme’s specificity

    • The specific reactant that an enzyme acts on is called the enzyme’s substrate

      • A substrate fits into a region of the enzyme called the active site

    • Enzymes are specific substrate molecules

    • For every enzyme, there are optimal conditions under which it is most effective

    • Temperature affects molecular motion

      • An enzyme’s optimal temperature produces the highest rate of contact between the reactants and the enzyme’s active site

    • Most human enzymes work best at 35-40℃

    • Many enzymes require nonprotein helpers called cofactors, which bind to the active site and function in catalysis

    • Some cofactors are inorganic

      • Ex: zinc, iron, copper

    • If a cofactor is an organic molecule, such as most vitamins, it is called a coenzyme

  • Enzyme inhibitors can regulate enzyme activity in the cell

    • A chemical that interferes with an enzyme’s activity is called an inhibitor

    • Competitive inhibitors

      • Block substrates from entering the active site

      • Reduce the enzyme’s productivity

    • Noncompetitive inhibitors

      • Bind to the enzyme somewhere other than the active site

      • Change the shape of the active site

      • Prevent the substrate from binding

    • Enzyme inhibitors are important in regulating cell metabolism

    • In some reactions, the product may act as an inhibitor of one of the enzymes in the pathway that produced it

      • This is called feedback inhibition

  • Many drugs, pesticides, and poisons are enzyme inhibitors

    • Many beneficial drugs act as enzyme inhibitors

      • Ibuprofen

        • Inhibiting the productions of prostaglandins

      • Some blood pressure medications

      • Some antidepressants

      • Many antibiotics

      • Protease inhibitors used to fight HIV

    • Enzyme inhibitors have also been developed as pesticides and deadly poisons for chemical warfare