Organelles

Cell Biology Lecture 1
06_Lecture_Presentation

Animal Cell Structure

Animal cells are typical of the eukaryotic cell, enclosed by a plasma membrane and containing a membrane-bound nucleus and organelles. Unlike the eukaryotic cells of plants and fungi, animal cells do not have a cell wall. This feature was lost in the distant past by the single-celled organisms that gave rise to the kingdom Animalia. Most cells, both animal and plant, range in size between 1 and 100 micrometers and are thus visible only with the aid of a microscope.

The lack of a rigid cell wall allowed animals to develop a greater diversity of cell types, tissues, and organs. Specialized cells that formed nerves and muscles—tissues impossible for plants to evolve—gave these organisms mobility. The ability to move about by the use of specialized muscle tissues is a hallmark of the animal world, though a few animals, primarily sponges, do not possess differentiated tissues. Notably, protozoans locomote, but it is only via nonmuscular means, in effect, using cilia, flagella, and pseudopodia.

The animal kingdom is unique among eukaryotic organisms because most animal tissues are bound together in an extracellular matrix by a triple helix of protein known ascollagen. Plant and fungal cells are bound together in tissues or aggregations by other molecules, such as pectin. The fact that no other organisms utilize collagen in this manner is one of the indications that all animals arose from a common unicellular ancestor. Bones, shells, spicules, and other hardened structures are formed when the collagen-containing extracellular matrix between animal cells becomes calcified.

Animals are a large and incredibly diverse group of organisms. Making up about three-quarters of the species on Earth, they run the gamut from corals and jellyfish to ants, whales, elephants, and, of course, humans. Being mobile has given animals, which are capable of sensing and responding to their environment, the flexibility to adopt many different modes of feeding, defense, and reproduction. Unlike plants, however, animals are unable to manufacture their own food, and therefore, are always directly or indirectly dependent on plant life.

Most animal cells are diploid, meaning that their chromosomes exist in homologous pairs. Different chromosomal ploidies are also, however, known to occasionally occur. The proliferation of animal cells occurs in a variety of ways. In instances of sexual reproduction, the cellular process of meiosis is first necessary so that haploid daughter cells, orgametes, can be produced. Two haploid cells then fuse to form a diploid zygote, which develops into a new organism as its cells divide and multiply.

The earliest fossil evidence of animals dates from the Vendian Period (650 to 544 million years ago), with coelenterate-type creatures that left traces of their soft bodies in shallow-water sediments. The first mass extinction ended that period, but during the Cambrian Period which followed, an explosion of new forms began the evolutionary radiation that produced most of the major groups, or phyla, known today. Vertebrates (animals with backbones) are not known to have occurred until the early Ordovician Period (505 to 438 million years ago).

Cells were discovered in 1665 by British scientist Robert Hooke who first observed them in his crude (by today's standards) seventeenth century optical microscope. In fact, Hooke coined the term "cell", in a biological context, when he described the microscopic structure of cork like a tiny, bare room or monk's cell. Illustrated in Figure 2 are a pair of fibroblast deer skin cells that have been labeled with fluorescent probes and photographed in the microscope to reveal their internal structure. The nuclei are stained with a red probe, while the Golgi apparatus and microfilament actin network are stained green and blue, respectively. The microscope has been a fundamental tool in the field of cell biology and is often used to observe living cells in culture. Use the links below to obtain more detailed information about the various components that are found in animal cells.

  • One or more per cell
  • Spherical shape
  • Denser than surrounding cytoplasm

Chromosomes

  • - Usually in the form of chromatin
  • - Contains genetic information
  • - Composed of DNA
  • - Thicken for cellular division
  • - Set number per species (i.e. 23 pairs for human)

Nuclear membrane

  • - Surrounds nucleus
  • - Composed of two layers
  • - Numerous openings for nuclear traffic

Nucleolus

  • - Spherical shape
  • - Visible when cell is not dividing
  • - Contains RNA for protein manufacture

Cytoplasm

  • Collective term for cytosol and organelles contained within
  • Colloidal suspension
  • Cytosol mainly composed of water with free-floating molecules
  • Viscosity constantly changes

- Paired cylindrical organelles near nucleus

- Composed of nine tubes, each with three tubules

- Involved in cellular division

- Lie at right angles to each other

Cytoskeleton

- Composed of microtubules , intermediate filaments

and microfilaments

- Supports cell and provides shape

- Aids movement of materials in and out of cells

- Tubular network fused to nuclear membrane

- Goes through cytoplasm onto cell membrane

- Stores, separates, and serves as cell's transport system

- Smooth type: lacks ribosomes

- Rough type (pictured): ribosomes embedded in surface

- Protein 'packaging plant'

- A membrane structure found near nucleus

- Composed of numerous layers forming a sac

- Digestive 'plant' for proteins, lipids, and carbohydrates

- Transports undigested material to cell membrane

for removal

- Vary in shape depending on process being carried out

- Cell breaks down if lysosome explodes

- Second largest organelle with unique genetic structure

- Double-layered outer membrane with inner folds called

cristae

- Energy-producing chemical reactions take place on

cristae

- Controls level of water and other materials in cell

- Recycles and decomposes proteins, fats, and

carbohydrates, and forms urea

- Each cell contains thousands

- Miniature 'protein factories'

- Composes 25% of cell's mass

- Stationary type: embedded in rough endoplasmic

reticulum

- Mobile type: injects proteins directly into cytoplasm

- Outer membrane of cell that controls cellular traffic

- Contains proteins (left, gray) that span through the

membrane and allow passage of materials

- Proteins are surrounded by a phospholipid bi-layer.