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📚 Cellular and Molecular Organization: A Comprehensive Study Guide
1. General Notions Concerning Eukaryotic Cells
The human body is an intricate system composed of an immense number of cells, estimated to be in the range of millions of billions (10¹⁵). These cells exhibit remarkable diversity in number, shape, and size, each adapted to its specific function.
1.1. Cell Numbers 📊
The distribution of cell types highlights their varying abundance and roles:
- Total Cells: Approximately 10¹⁵ (millions of billions).
- Red Blood Cells: The most numerous, around 10¹² (thousands of billions). About 10 million are replaced daily from hematopoietic bone marrow.
- Hepatocytes (Liver Cells) & Neurons (Nerve Cells): Approximately 10¹¹ (hundreds of billions). Several millions die daily.
- Glial Cells: Ten times more numerous than neurons, reaching 10¹² (thousands of billions).
1.2. Cell Shape and Function ✅
Cell shape is intricately linked to its age and specific role:
- Young Cells: Generally spherical (e.g., ovule, pluripotent stem cells).
- Mature Cells: Differentiate and adapt their shape to function.
- Contractile Cells: Elongated (e.g., muscle cells are spindled).
- Conductive Cells: Have prolongations (e.g., neurons).
- Red Blood Cells: Biconcave disc shape to maximize surface area for oxygen transfer.
- Glial Cells: Star-shaped.
- Other Shapes: Cubic, cylindrical, polyhedral (e.g., endothelial cells). Some, like Purkinje cells in the cerebellum, have peculiar shapes.
1.3. Cell Size and Volume Constancy 📏
Human cells generally range from 20-30 µm (1 µm = 10⁻⁶ m) in mean diameter.
- Smallest Cells: Cerebellum neurons (3-6 µm) and lymphocytes (4-5 µm).
- Largest Cells: Giant neurons from the frontal cortex (125-150 µm, pyramidal shape) and the ovocyte (about 250 µm).
- 💡 Insight: The yolk of an ostrich egg is a single cell approximately 10 cm in diameter!
- Volume Constancy Law: Certain cell types from a specific organ maintain approximately the same volume across various animal species, regardless of the organism's overall body size.
- Example 1: Red blood cells are about 6 µm in mice, 8 µm in humans, and 9 µm in elephants. The variance is minimal despite vast differences in body size.
- Example 2: Hepatocyte diameter differs insignificantly between species, even though liver size varies greatly.
- Conclusion: The size of an organ is determined by the number of cells it contains, not by the size of individual cells.
2. Molecular Bases of Chemical Organization of the Cell
Living matter is composed of 92 chemical elements, predominantly lighter ones, as heavy elements are generally inert and insoluble in water. These elements are categorized based on their abundance.
2.1. Chemical Elements in Living Organisms
2.1.1. Macroelements (Major Chemical Elements)
These constitute 2-65% each and form the core of cell structures.
- Key Elements: Carbon (C), Hydrogen (H), Oxygen (O), Nitrogen (N).
- Carbon's Unique Features:
- Tetravalent, forming strong covalent bonds with other carbon atoms and elements (H, N, O).
- Forms long chains, branched structures, and rings, leading to an enormous variety of macromolecules.
- Ability to form double or triple bonds results in unsaturated, highly reactive compounds vital for metabolic processes.
2.1.2. Microelements (Less Abundant Elements)
These constitute about 0.02-0.1% each.
- Metaloid Elements: Phosphorus (P), Sulfur (S), Chlorine (Cl).
- Metals: Sodium (Na), Potassium (K), Calcium (Ca), Magnesium (Mg).
- Distribution: Na is more abundant outside the cell, while K is more abundant inside.
- Plastic Elements: Both macroelements and microelements are considered "plastic elements" as they form biological structures.
2.1.3. Oligoelements (Trace Elements) ⚠️
These constitute less than 0.02% each but are crucial for life and medicine.
- Examples and Roles:
- Iron (Fe): Part of hemoglobin and myoglobin, binds and transports oxygen.
- Iodine (I): Part of thyroid hormones.
- Cobalt (Co), Zinc (Zn), Lead (Pb), Cadmium (Cd): Can be enzymatic activators/inhibitors, influence cardiovascular system, gamete formation, embryonic development, or induce neuropsychological conditions.
- Biochemical Endemics (Deficiency Impacts):
- Iodine Deficiency: Hypothyroidism in adults, cretinism in children.
- Iron Insufficiency: Ferriprive anemia.
- Selenium (Se) Lack/Insufficiency: Associated with higher cancer risk.
- Fluorine (F) Lack: Leads to dental caries.
- Magnesium (Mg) Deficiency: Associated with higher incidence of cardiovascular diseases.
2.2. Chemical Substances
The relative ratio of chemical substances is remarkably constant across all living beings, illustrating the material unity of the biosphere. For example, both a human body and an E. coli cell contain approximately:
- Water: 70%
- Proteins: 15%
- Nucleic Acids: 7%
- Glucides (Carbohydrates) & Metabolites: 3%
- Lipids & Metabolites: 2%
- Inorganic Ions: 1%
- Other Compounds: <1% However, significant differences exist at the cellular level, even within the same body (e.g., neurons vs. red blood cells).
2.2.1. Inorganic Substances
2.2.1.1. Water 💧
Water is the primordial and most abundant molecule in all living cells, often called the "essence of life."
- Abundance: In a 70 kg human, water accounts for about 40 kg.
- Compartments:
- Intracellular Water: ~55% (main constituent of each cell). Younger, metabolically active cells have higher water content (up to 95%).
- Extracellular Water: ~45% (plasma, lymph, interstitial liquids, digestive secretions, cerebrospinal fluid, serous cavity liquids).
- Role as Solvent: Water is the only solvent of living matter, facilitating all chemical reactions in aquatic solutions.
- Physico-Chemical Properties:
- Electric Dipole: Oxygen and hydrogen atoms create an electric dipole, giving water a high dielectric constant (80x vacuum). This provides an "electrical shield" and makes water an excellent solvent for ionic and polar covalent substances.
- Dissociation: Water molecules dissociate into protons (H⁺) and hydroxyl ions (OH⁻), participating in chemical reactions (2H₂O ↔ H₃O⁺ + OH⁻).
- Hydrogen Bonding: Each water molecule can bind 1-4 others via weak hydrogen bonds.
- High Heat Capacity: These bonds require significant energy to break, acting as a "thermal shield" against heat generated by biochemical processes.
- High Vaporization Heat: Important for cooling organisms through evaporation (thermoregulatory property).
- Water Phases:
- Free Water (95%): Solvent or dispersion medium.
- Bound Water (5%): Water molecules bound by hydrogen bonds to other structures (mainly proteins).
- Aquaporins (Water-Channel Proteins):
- Specialized proteins facilitating water transport across membranes.
- Discovery: First identified by Prof. Gheorghe Benga in human red blood cells (1985). Peter Agre later rediscovered AQP1, leading to the 2003 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
- Distribution: Found in bacteria, plants (>200 types), and animals (11 types in humans).
- Examples: AQP1 (red blood cells, kidney, capillaries), AQP2 (renal collecting tubes, urine concentration with ADH), AQP3 (renal collecting tubes, lungs, brain), AQP0 (crystalline lens transparency).
- Pathological Implications: Dysfunctions linked to diabetes insipidus, edematous cardiac insufficiency, nervous system diseases.
2.2.1.2. Mineral Salts 🧂
Present as ions or bound to macromolecules.
- Cations: Na⁺ (main extracellular), K⁺ (main intracellular), Ca²⁺, Mg²⁺.
- Anions: Phosphates (PO₄³⁻, HPO₄²⁻, H₂PO₄⁻), Sulphate (SO₄²⁻), Carbonates (HCO₃⁻, CO₃²⁻), Nitrate (NO₃⁻).
- Importance:
- Influence enzyme activity and cellular processes (permeability, excitability, conductibility, contractility, cytoplasmic viscosity, cell division).
- Contribute to osmotic pressure and acid-base equilibrium (intra- and extracellular pH).
- ⚠️ Caution: Small variations in ion concentration can lead to major functional alterations (e.g., cardiac arrhythmias) or sudden death.
- Concentration: Relatively constant (about 1% of total weight) across living bodies, another evidence of biosphere's material unity.
2.2.2. Organic Substances
These are compounds containing carbon atoms, forming four main categories: carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids. They feature common small chemical groups like methyl (-CH₃), hydroxyl (-OH), carboxyl (-COOH), and amino (-NH₂), which dictate their properties.
2.2.2.1. Carbohydrates (Sugars) 🍬
Serve both plastic (structural) and energetic roles.
- Monosaccharides: General formula (CH₂O)n, with two or more hydroxyl groups.
- Aldoses: Contain an aldehyde group.
- Ketoses: Contain a ketone group.
- Plastic Role: Ribose, deoxyribose (in nucleic acids).
- Energetic Role: Glucose is the main cellular "fuel."
- Highly soluble, easily absorbed and transported.
- Extremely stable (hexose).
- Releases high energy upon bond breakage.
- Easily metabolized (glycolysis) to produce ATP.
- Polysaccharides:
- Glycogen: Main storage form of glucose in humans/animals (starch in plants).
- Structure: Glucose residues linked by α1-4 (chains) and α1-6 (branches) glycosidic bonds.
- Structure-Function Relationship:
- Stores thousands of glucose molecules, minimizing osmotic pressure.
- Enzymes work simultaneously on many ramifications, allowing rapid glycogenesis (formation) and glycogenolysis (release).
- Location/Usage:
- Liver Glycogen: Rapidly restored and used for glucose release to maintain blood glucose levels.
- Muscle Glycogen: Restored over longer periods, used only after hepatic glycogen is consumed (e.g., extreme physical efforts).
- Neurons: Cannot store glycogen but are major glucose consumers and highly sensitive to hypoglycemia.
- Observation: Visible as red granules with Best's Carmine (light microscope) or black granules (electron microscope).
- Mucopolysaccharides: Long, fibrous molecules formed from amino derivatives of monosaccharides (e.g., glucosamine).
- Can attach to polypeptides to form proteoglycans, crucial for the extracellular matrix of connective tissue.
- Examples: Hyaluronic acid, chondroitin-sulfuric acid, keratan-sulfate, dermatan-sulfate, heparin.
- Functions: Highly hydrated gels provide mechanical support, shock absorption, lubrication, and participate in tissue metabolism.
- Glycogen: Main storage form of glucose in humans/animals (starch in plants).
2.2.2.2. Lipids (Fats) 🥑
Perform diverse roles in the cell.
- Roles:
- Plastic: Part of cell membrane structure.
- Energetic: Highest energetic value "fuel" source.
- Regulatory: Steroid hormones, lipid-nature vitamins, prostaglandins.
- Types of Lipids:
- Simple Lipids (Free Fatty Acids): Oxidized for energy or synthesized into other lipids.
- Cells use 16-18 carbon atom chains.
- <14 C atoms are detergents; >20 C atoms are highly insoluble and metabolically useless.
- Triglycerides (Neutral Fats): Storage form of lipids in adipocytes (fat cells).
- Pathological conditions: Found in cytosol of other cells (e.g., hepatic steatosis).
- Observation: Stained black with "Sudan Black" or orange with "Sudan III."
- Complex Lipids: Present in cellular membranes.
- Phospholipids:
- Glycerin-phosphatides: Based on glycerol, with fatty acids and a polar group (e.g., phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine).
- Sphingomyelin: Based on sphingosine, with a fatty acid and phosphorylcholine.
- Glycolipids: Based on sphingosine, with a fatty acid and glucidic radicals (e.g., cerebrosides, gangliosides).
- Amphiphiles: Phospholipids and glycolipids are amphiphilic (hydrophobic fatty acid chains, hydrophilic polar groups), forming micelles or lipidic bilayers, which are the basis of biological membranes.
- Phospholipids:
- Simple Lipids (Free Fatty Acids): Oxidized for energy or synthesized into other lipids.
2.2.2.3. Proteins 💪
The most versatile macromolecules, with numerous vital roles.
- Roles:
- Plastic: Structural components of all cellular structures (membranes, chromatin - histones).
- Transport & Storage: Ferritin (Fe storage), hemoglobin (O₂ transport).
- Movement: Actin and myosin (muscle contraction, cell movements).
- Resistance & Elasticity: Elastin, collagen (tissues).
- Regulatory: CDKs (cell growth, development, division).
- Catalytic: Almost all enzymes (metabolic processes).
- Immune Defense: Antibodies.
- Receptor: Synaptic receptors.
- Nutrition: Ovalbumin.
- Homeostasis: Maintaining osmotic pressure and pH.
- Structure & Diversity:
- Macromolecules formed by polycondensation of 20 different amino acids via peptide bonds (-CO-NH-).
- Primary Structure: Amino acid sequence.
- Secondary, Tertiary, Quaternary Structures: Determine the complex 3D spatial arrangement, essential for biological activity.
- Heterogeneity: Varies by amino acid size/polarity, and presence of lipidic (lipoproteins), glucidic (glycoproteins), phosphoric (phosphoproteins), sulfur, or metal (metalloproteins) radicals.
- Association of multiple polypeptide chains (e.g., hemoglobin has 4 chains).
- Specificity: Ability to specifically combine with substances, even at low concentrations. This underlies critical molecular interactions:
- Antigen-antibody reactions.
- Enzyme-substrate reactions.
- Receptor-ligand reactions.
- Study Methods:
- Cytochemical Reactions: Observe amino- or sulfhydryl- groups via colored (light microscope) or electron-dense (electron microscope) precipitates.
- Enzymatic Reactions: Stained precipitates on tissue sections for enzymes.
- Specific Antibodies: Marked with fluorescent groups (UV light microscope) or electron-dense metals (colloidal gold, ferritin for electron microscope).








