Levels of Organisation Flashcards

1
Q

What is a cell?

A

The smallest structural & functional unit of the living organism.

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2
Q

What is a tissue?

A

A group of modified cells specialized to perform specific function
E.g.: Epithelial, connective, muscle and nervous

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3
Q

What is an organ?

A

A group of tissues which perform a specific function

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4
Q

What is an organ system?

A

A group of organs which perform a related function

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5
Q

List the organelles of the cell?

A

Cell membrane, cytoskeleton, microtubules, cytoplasm, nucleus, rough ER, smooth ER, Golgi apparatus, mitochondria, secretory vesicles, lysosomes, peroxisomes and endosomes

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6
Q

Mitochondria

A

Oval shaped structure
Double layer structure - inner membrane folded into cristae
Granular matrix inside the mitochondria

Functions include generation of ATP, cell cycle, cell growth control and apoptosis

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7
Q

Ribosomes

A

Made from 2 subunits
Subunits made from proteins

Can either be free in the cytoplasm or attached to rER

Translate mRNA into protein

Polyribosomes: Ribosomes found in clusters held together by RNA strand

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8
Q

Rough ER

A

Formed from interconnected network of tubules and vesicles
Studded with ribosomes
Involved in synthesis and packaging of proteins

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9
Q

Smooth ER

A
Synthesize fatty acids and steroids
Detoxify drugs in liver
Breakdown glycogen and form glucose
Ca++ store and release
Segregates newly synthesized proteins from cytoplasm
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10
Q

Golgi Apparatus

A

Flattened membranous sacs
Closely associated with rER
Have concave side (cis face) located near ER - receiving end of proteins
Convex side (trans face) - “shipping” end proteins

Involved in processing proteins
Storage and transport of material out of the cell

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11
Q

Lysosomes

A

Vesicles produced by Golgi Apparatus
Contain acid hydrolases (hydrolysing enzymes)

Breakdown waste material and cellular debris

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12
Q

Phagosomes

A

Vacuoles formed by fusion of cell membrane around the particle

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13
Q

Peroxisomes

A

Membrane bound organelles
Present in all cells; prominent in hepatocytes and in proximal tubule cells
Contain oxidative enzymes for:
1. Hydrogen peroxide metabolism
2. Fatty acid metabolism
3. Alcohol degradation
4. Formation of specialised phospholipid that is needed for myelination of nerve cells.

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14
Q

Nucleus

A

Contains chromatin and the nucleolus
Structure is surrounded by nuclear envelope

Storage and transmission of genetic material

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15
Q

Nuclear envelope

A

Double layered structure forming selective barrier between nucleus and cytoplasm
Outer membrane consistent with rough ER
Inner membrane lined with nuclear lamina (condensation of intermediate filaments) - maintains nucleus shape
Outer and inner membranes of the nuclear envelope fuse to form numerous nuclear pores
Pores control the movement of ribosomal subunits between the nucleus and cytoplasm.

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16
Q

Chromatin

A

Chromatin/DNA encodes the cell structure and functions

17
Q

What are the 2 states of chromatin?

A
  1. Heterochromatin: Inactive; stains dark

2. Euchromatin: Active; light staining

18
Q

Nucleolus

A

Dark-staining spherical body
Not bound by a membrane
Contains RNA and protein
Site of ribosome synthesis

19
Q

Cytoskeleton

A

Maintain cellular architecture, facilitate motility and divide the cytosol into functional discrete areas

20
Q

What are the classifications of cytoskeletons?

A

According to the thickness they are divided into:

  1. Microtubules (composed of tubulin subunits) 25 nm thick
  2. Intermediate filaments 10 nm thick
  3. Microfilaments (mostly actin) 7 nm thick
21
Q

Microtubules

A

Hollow tubes present in all cell types except red blood cells
Made of spherical protein tubulin
Responsible for intracellular movement of cytoplasmic organelles
Form centrioles
Form cilia and flagella

22
Q

Intermediate filaments

A

Tough, insoluble protein fibers with high tensile strength

Resist pulling forces on the cell

23
Q

Microfilaments

A

The strands of the protein actin
Attached to the cytoplasmic side of the plasma membrane
Braces and strengthens the cell surface

24
Q

Centrosomes and centrioles

A

Centrosomes are an area of the cytoplasm located near the nucleus
Within centrosome: 2 small cylindrical structures called centrioles
Centrioles = small barrel-shaped organelles formed of pinwheel array of 9 triplets of microtubules

During cell division centrioles move to the opposite poles of the cell, where organize spindles that control the distribution of chromosomes to the daughter cells.

25
Q

What are the forms of cellular extensions?

A
  1. Cilia
  2. Flagella
  3. Microvilli
  4. Sterocilia
26
Q

Cilia

A

Short cell projection composed of nine pairs of microtubules surrounding a central pair
They move fluid in a single direction across the cell surface.

27
Q

Flagella

A

Longer than cilia, e.g., tail of the human sperm.

28
Q

Microvilli

A

Tubular extensions of plasma membrane which contain bundle of actin filaments

Increase surface area for absorption

29
Q

Sterocilia

A

Modified microvilli seen on cells in the epididymis.
Length and bundle arrangement differentiate them from microvilli

Increase surface area for absorption