2:1:1 Cell structure Flashcards

1
Q

What are microscopes

A

Used to analyse cell components and observe organelles

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2
Q

What are the 3 types of microscope

A
  • Optical/light microscopes
  • Electron microscopes
  • Laser scanning confocal microscopes
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3
Q

What is magnification

A

Tells you how many times bigger the image produces is than the real life object

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4
Q

What is resolution

A

The ability to distinguish between objects that are close together

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5
Q

What are optical/light microscopes

A
  • Use light to form image
  • Light causes limited resolution, due to the it being impossible to distinguish between objects closer than half a wavelength of light
  • Maximum resolution of 0.2um
  • Maximum useful magnification of x1500
  • Used to observe eukaryotic cells and certain organelles
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6
Q

What are electron microscopes

A
  • Use electrons to form an image
  • This allows for increased resolution and clear images
  • Maximum resolution of 0.0002um
  • Maximum useful magnification of x1,5000,000
  • Used to observe small organelles
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7
Q

What are the 2 types of electron microscopes

A
  • Transmission (TEMs)
  • Scanning (SEMs)
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8
Q

What are transmission electron microscopes, as well as their advantages and disadvantages

A
  • Use electromagnets to focus a beam of electrons which is transmitted through the specimen
  • Dense areas absorb more electrons so show up as darker
  • Advantages: high resolution images, internal structures of organelles shown
  • Disadvantages: only used with thin specimens, can’t be used for live specimens, long treatment process for specimens, don’t produce a coloured image
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9
Q

What are scanning electron microscopes, as well as their advantages and disadvantages

A
  • Scan a beam of electrons across specimens
  • Beam bounces off the surface, and the electrons are detected and form a 3D image
  • Advantages: used of thick specimens, can observe external specimen structure
  • Disadvantages: lower resolution than TEMs, can’t use live specimens, don’t produce coloured image
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10
Q

What are laser scanning confocal microscopes, as well as their advantages and disadvantages

A
  • Specimen dyed with fluorescent stains
  • Specimens then scanned with a laser beam which is reflected by the dyes
  • Advantages: used on thick specimens, show external specimen structure, high resolution images
  • Disadvantages: slow process, can cause photo damage to cells
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11
Q

How to prepare a microscope slide with liquid specimen

A
  • Add a drop of sample to the slide with a pipette
  • Cover with a coverslip and press to remove air bubbles
  • Wear gloves to prevent cross contamination
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12
Q

How to prepare a microscope slide with a solid specimen

A
  • Wear gloves to prevent cross contamination
  • Use scissors to cut small sample of specimen
  • Use forceps to peel a thin layer of cells from sample
  • Apply a stain
  • Place coverslip on and press to remove air bubbles
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13
Q

Describe the process of using an optical microscope

A
  • Start with low power objective lens to find what to look for
  • Once found increase the power of objective lens
  • If the sample dehydrates add a drop of water
  • If the image is blurry use the coarse focus and switch to a lower power objective lens
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14
Q

Label a microscope diagram

A
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15
Q

What is a graticule and what does it help with

A
  • A small disc with an engraved ruler placed into the eyepiece of the microscope
  • It must be calibrated by using the scale engraved on the microscope slide (stage micrometer)
  • Work out what each graticule unit is worth in um
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16
Q

Why is staining used in light microscopy

A
  • To differentiate between details in cells
  • Dyes absorb specific colours of light while reflecting others
  • Certain tissues absorb certain dyes, so some specimens are stained with multiple dyes (differential staining)
  • Toluidine blue (blue) and phloroglucinol (red/pink) are common stains
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17
Q

Why is staining used in electron microscopy

A
  • TEMs require specimens to be stained to absorb electrons
  • The dye shows up in shades of grey
  • Heavy metal compounds are used as dyes as they absorb electrons well
  • Colours can be added to the image via software
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18
Q

What are the guidelines for microscope drawings

A
  • Drawing must have a title
  • Magnification of image must be recorded
  • Sharp pencil lines used
  • Draw on white paper
  • Clear, continuous lines
  • No shading
  • Should take up more than 50% of the page
  • Proper proportions
  • Label lines shouldn’t have arrow heads of cross each other, and drawn with a ruler
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19
Q

What is the magnification formula

A
  • Magnification (M)
  • Image (I)
  • Actual size of specimen (A)
  • Every measurement must be in the same unit (magnification had no units)
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20
Q

How to convert from meters to um

A
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21
Q

What lenses does a optical/light microscope have

A
  • An eyepiece lens (x10)
  • 3 objective lenses with increasing magnification
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22
Q

How to calculate total magnification

A

Total magnification = eyepiece lens magnification x objective lens magnification

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23
Q

How is resolution limited

A
  • By the wavelength of light
  • As light passes through a specimen, it’s diffracted, and the longer the wavelength the more it is diffracted
  • Light microscopes have long wavelengths so the resolution is worse
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24
Q

What is the cell membrane

A
  • All cells have cell surface membranes
  • They control the exchange of of materials between the external and internal cell environment (partially permeable)
  • Formed from a phospholipid bilayer
25
Q

What is the cell wall

A
  • Only in plant cells
  • Provide structural support due to cellulose (plants) and peptidoglycan (bacteria)
  • Freely permeable
  • Pores connecting adjacent cells (plasmodesmata)
26
Q

What is the nucleus

A
  • Present in all eukaryotic cells
  • Double membrane (nuclear envelope)
  • Nuclear pores allow molecules (e.g. mRNA) in and out of
  • Contains chromatin
  • Has a nucleolus as the site of ribosome production
27
Q

What is mitochondria

A
  • Site of aerobic respiration
  • Surrounded by double membrane
  • Inner membrane folds to form cristae
  • Matrix contains enzymes
  • MitochondrialDNA found in the matrix
28
Q

What are chloroplasts

A
  • Only in plant cells
  • Surrounded by double membrane
  • Thylakoids stack to form grana which are joined by lamellae
  • Site of photosynthesis
  • Contain chloroplast DNA
29
Q

What are ribosomes

A
  • Found in the cytoplasm of rough ER of all cells
  • Complex of ribosomal RNA and proteins
  • 80S ribosomes are composed of 60S and 40S subunits and are found in eukaryotic cells
  • 70S ribosomes are composed of 50S and 30S subunits and are found in prokaryotes
  • Site of protein synthesis
30
Q

What is the smooth endoplasmic reticulum

A
  • No ribosomes on the surface
  • Involved in the production, processing and storage of lipids, carbohydrates and steroids
31
Q

What is the rough endoplasmic reticulum

A
  • Surface covered in ribosomes
  • Formed from continuous folds of nuclear envelope membrane
  • Processes protein made by ribosomes
32
Q

What is the golgi apparatus

A
  • Flattened sacs of membrane similar to the SER
  • Modifies proteins and lipids before packaging them in golgi vesicles
  • Vesicles then transport to required destination
33
Q

What is the large permanent vacuole

A
  • Only in plant cells
  • Surrounded by selectively permeable membrane (tonoplast)
  • Filled with cell sap
34
Q

What are vesicles

A
  • Membrane bound sacs for transport and storage
35
Q

What are lysosomes

A
  • Specialised vesicles containing hydrolytic enzymes
  • Break down waste
  • Used by immune system and in apoptosis
36
Q

Label a plant cell diagram

A
37
Q

Label an animal cell diagram

A
38
Q

What are the roles of the cytoskeleton

A
  • Strength and support
  • Intracellular movement
  • Extracellular movement
39
Q

What are microtubules

A
  • Found in all eukaryotic cells
  • Makes up the cell cytoskeleton
  • Made of alpha and beta tubulin which combine to form dimers
  • Dimers join to form protofilaments
  • Protofilaments in a hollow cylinder make a microtubule
  • Used for support and intracellular movement
40
Q

What are microtubules

A
  • Hollow tubes of protofilaments which are made of alpha and beta tubulin
  • Makes up the cytoskeleton of eukaryotic cells
  • Provide support and intracellular transport
  • 25nm diameter
41
Q

What are microvilli

A
  • Cell membrane projection found on specialised animal cells
  • Increase cell surface area
42
Q

What are cilia

A
  • Hair like projections made of microtubules
  • Allow the movement of substances over the cell surface
43
Q

What are flagella

A
  • Found in specialised cells
  • Made of long microtubules
  • Provide cell movement (e.g. sperm cells)
44
Q

What are microfilaments

A
  • Made of the protein actin which forms solid strands
  • Breaks down and builds up easily so helps with cell shape and movement
45
Q

What structures are unique to animal cells

A
  • Centrioles
  • Microvilli
46
Q

What structures are unique to plant cells

A
  • Cell wall
  • Large permenant vacuole
  • Chloroplasts
  • Plasmodesmata
  • More regular shape
47
Q

What would an image of a cell under a light microscope look like

A
48
Q

What would a cell look like under a transmission electron microscope

A
49
Q

What would a cell look like under a scanning electron microscope

A
50
Q

What would a cell look like under a laser scanning confocal microscope

A
51
Q

What are organelles

A

Specialised parts of a cell that carry out a particular function (e.g. production and secretion of proteins)

52
Q

What are centrioles

A
  • Hollow fibres made of microtubules
  • Centrioles form centrosomes which organise into spindle fibres during cell division
53
Q

Describe the roles of organelles in the production and secretion of proteins

A
  • DNA from the nucleus is copied into a molecule of mRNA
  • mRNA leaves through the nuclear pore and attaches to a ribosome on the RER
  • The ribosome synthesises a protein from the mRNA
  • Protein passes into the lumen of the RER to be processed
  • Processed proteins are transported in vesicles to the Golgi apparatus, and fuse with it to release the proteins
  • Golgi apparatus modifies the proteins in preparation for secretion
  • Modified proteins leave the Golgi apparatus in Golgi vesicles
  • The vesicles fuse with the cell surface membrane and proteins are released via exocytosis
54
Q

Label a cytoskeleton diagram

A
55
Q

What are eukaryotic cells

A
  • Animal and plant cells
  • Have membrane bound nucleus and chromosomes
  • Contain membrane bound organelles
56
Q

What are plasmids

A

Small loops of DNA in prokaryotic cells that contain genes that can be passed between cells

57
Q

What are (slime) capsules

A

Outer layer that helps protect prokaryotic cells from drying out and from attack by cells of the host cells immune system

58
Q

Label a prokaryote cell diagram with features that are always and sometimes there

A
59
Q

Comparisons or prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells (size, genome, cell division, ribosomes, organelles, cell wall)

A