Cell organelle specialization Flashcards

1
Q

Nucleus

A
  • Usually 1, some cells have multiple or none due to development
    Ex. multiple nucleus= muscle fibres because multiple cells combine together
    Ex. no nucleus- RBC, during development the nucleus is expelled
  • Basophilic
  • Differing levels of euchromatin (EC) and Heterochromatin (HC).
    EC- appears lighter, less coiled, DNA more exposed because more active nucleus actively replicating whereas HC- appears darker, more coiled, DNA less exposed
  • Nucleolus- region where rRNA is made for ribosome synthesis

**Active cells will have more EC and nucleoli

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2
Q

Mitochondria

A
  • produce ATP
  • Metabolize fatty acids
  • Gluconeogenesis
  • Calcium buffering- Ca is a signal for many processes, so needs to be regulated
  • Regulate apoptosis

Visual appearance gives a clue on cell function
- Energy producing mitochondria form cristae
- Lipid producing mitochondria form tubular projections

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3
Q

Ribosomes

A

Found free in cytoplasm or in the RER.

Makes proteins.

Made up of rRNA and proteins= basophilic

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4
Q

Smooth ER

A
  • No ribosomes, continuous with RER
  • Synthesizes cholesterol, steroids, carbohydrates, lipids, phospholipids, detoxifies drugs or toxins (in liver), stores Ca (in muscles)
  • Abundant in cells that are important for synthesis of lipids and metabolism of drugs and toxins (eg. Hepatocytes) AND cells that produce steroid hormones (eg. Ovarian cells, adrenocortical cells)
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5
Q

Golgi apparatus

A

Function:
- Chemical modification: contains enzymes to chemically modify nascent proteins (eg. Glycosylation, sulfation, phosphorylation, cleavage)
- Packing and storage: initiates packing, concentrations and storage of secretory products, preparing them for transport to specific locations of the cell

Structure:
- Stacked membrane: composed of series of flattened, stacked pouches
- Cis face: the receiving side; closest to the ER. Receives materials from ER for modification
- Trans face: the shipping side; oriented toward the plasma membrane. Sends modified products to their final destinations

**Hard to stain as they are primarily made of lipids.

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6
Q

Secretory granules

A

Made from golgi body.

Can be both basophilic or acidophilic depending on the chemical composition of their contents

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7
Q

Lysosomes

A

Degradation organelle

usually spherical. Appear uniformly granular and electron dense. If less electron dense then degradation is probably underway.

typically acidic due to enzymes

Made in RER, shipped to golgi

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8
Q

Function of lysosomes

A
  • Remove obsolete or non-functional proteins, organelles or membranes
    Ex. autophagosomes- lipofuscin
  • Store hydrolytic enzymes before they are secreted outside
    Ex. Osteoclasts are bone cells that break down bone tissue. Important for maintenance, repair, and remodeling of bones
  • Store hydrolytic enzymes to digest invading pathogens
    Ex. macrophages and neutrophils function to detect, engulf, and destroy invading pathogens
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9
Q

Peroxisomes

A

Degradation organelles

Structure
- Similar to lysosomes
- Abundant in liver and proximal convoluted tubules of the kidney
- Can appear crystalline
- Contains various enzymes that work at neutral pH

Function
- Detoxification
- Beta-oxidation of long fatty acids
- Removes the reactive oxygen species (eg. Catalase, oxidases, peroxidase) to prevent oxidative damage

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10
Q

Lipid droplets

A

Structure:
- Non membrane bound droplets are found in adipocytes, steroid producing cells

Function:
- Lipid storage

Typically dyed orange- typical staining method for lipid droplets

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