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Thursday, January 17, 2013

Eukaryotic


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Eukaryotes
The organisms whose cells contain a nucleus. A saclike structure that encloses the cell’s hereditary materials. The presence of a nucleus distinguishes eukaryotes from prokaryotes, those simple, one-celled organisms in which the hereditary material floats free within the cell. Only the eukaryotic cell is capable of a high degree of specialization, and specialization is what makes multi cellular organisms possible. Just as banks, post offices, and other specialized workplaces are intrinsic to a city, cells tailored for certain jobs are intrinsic to more-complex organisms. Working in concert, specialized cells can create a higher level of organization known as tissues, such as the growing shoot of a plant or the spiny skin of a sea star. Coordinated tissues form organs and, in animals, these organs combine to form complex organ systems, such as the circulatory, digestive, and respiratory systems. The orchestration of these organ systems makes up the organism. 


 Size and Structure of Eukaryotes

The complexity of eukaryotic cells is reflected in their size. In general, the diameter of eukaryotic cells, which range in size from 0.01 mm to 1 mm (0.000394 in to 0.0394 in), is 10 to 100 times that of typical prokaryotic cells. An average-sized animal cell measures about 0.020 mm (0.0008 in), about one-fifth the thickness of the page of a book, while a typical plant cell is slightly larger, about 0.035 mm (about 0.0014 in). The eukaryotic cell with the greatest diameter is the ostrich egg, which measures about 120 mm (4.72 in). The longest eukaryote cells on record are the nerve cells that extend 3 m (10 ft) down a giraffe’s neck.
Ostrich egg

The largest and most conspicuous organelle is the nucleus. The nucleus encloses and protects the cell’s genetic material, deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), so that it is not damaged by biochemical reactions in the cell. Within the eukaryotic nucleus, DNA is wrapped around specialized proteins called histones, like a thread wound around a series of spools. Each DNA strand and its histones fold back and forth several times to form a compact, stick-shaped structure called a chromosome. Depending on the organism, the nucleus contains from one to over a thousand chromosomes. Surrounding the nucleus is the nuclear envelope, a membrane with numerous pores. The pores, ringed by special protein, regulate the flow of substances into and out of the nucleus.


Eukaryotic Nutrition

To function, eukaryotes need organic molecules: carbohydrates such as sugar and starch; proteins; lipids, which include fats and oils; and nucleic acids such as DNA. Sugars such as glucose are particularly important because eukaryotes use energy from sugar to build proteins, lipids, and other organic molecules. Photosynthetic eukaryotes are known as autotrophs, a group that includes plants, seaweeds, and microscopic algae, all of which can make their own sugar. Those that must take in sugar from outside sources are called heterotrophs. Among the heterotrophs are many single-celled eukaryotes, and all fungi and animals.

Heterotrophic eukaryotes typically absorb the nutrients in food through the plasma membrane. To accomplish this task, they must first break down, or digest, the food. Fungi secrete digestive enzymes onto the surface of their food—often decaying leaves or branches—and then absorb the enzyme-released nutrients across the cell wall and plasma membrane. In contrast, animals first ingest their food into some sort of digestive structure such as the stomach. There, digestive enzymes break down the food, and the nutrients are then absorbed into the cells.
Some single-celled eukaryotes, such as amoebas, use a process called endocytosis. In endocytosis, these organisms extrude part of the plasma membrane, scoop up a food particle, and drag it into the cell, where they digest it using enzymes within the cell. In these eukaryotes, large waste molecules typically are expelled from the cell by a reverse process called exocytosis. The waste is bundled into a sac called a vesicle and transported to the plasma membrane, where it fuses with the membrane. The waste is then expelled through a hole in the fused membrane. In complex animals, cells generate wastes such as urea when nutrients are broken down within cells. These wastes are transported by blood to the kidneys. The kidneys process the waste and produce urine, which is removed from the body through the bladder. Undigested food travels through the tube like intestines and is eliminated through the digestive system.


Cell Division

Eukaryotes carry out cell division to make the new cells needed for growth, to repair damaged cells, and to replace worn out, dying cells. Most eukaryotic cells divide by mitosis, a process that produces two cells with the same genetic information as the original cell. Single-celled eukaryotes, such as amoebas and diatoms, commonly reproduce by mitosis.
Many eukaryotes also undergo a second type of cell division, called meiosis, which is designed for sexual reproduction, the union of male and female sex cells. In meiosis, two cell divisions occur in which the genetic material is rearranged, resulting in four genetically unique cells, each of which contains only half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell. When two cells with half the number of chromosomes unite, the new cell contains the full complement of chromosomes needed to produce the new organism.

Evolutionary Origin of Eukaryotic
Eukaryotes evolved much later than prokaryotes, whose origins date to about 3.5 billion to 3.8 billion years before present. Alga-like fossils from ancient rocks suggest that eukaryotes may have evolved about 2.1 billion years before present. Other fossil remains indicate that eukaryotes were well established 1.6 billion years before present. These fossils, called acritarchs, are hollow spheres that appear to be spores or cysts of eukaryotic algae.
Eukaryotic cells are thought to have evolved from primitive prokaryotes. Evidence for this view is found in the archaea, prokaryotes that resemble both bacteria and eukaryotes. Like bacteria, the archaea lack a nucleus and most other organelles. Like eukaryotes, they display flexible cell membranes and histone proteins, and have certain segments of DNA in common. This evidence, along with other molecular studies, leads many scientists to conclude that archaea, bacteria, and eukaryotes arose from a common ancestral prokaryote similar to the archaea. However, according to a theory developed by American microbiologist Carl Woese, the archaea, bacteria, and eukaryotes may have arisen, not from a single common ancestor, but from a group of genetically diverse, primitive prokaryotes.
 

 
 
 

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Prokaryotes




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Prokaryotes
Prokaryote, relatively simple unicellular organism, such as a bacterium, characterized by the absence of a nucleus and other specialized cell structures. Scientists distinguish prokaryotes from eukaryotes, which are more complex organisms with cells that contain a nucleus, such as plants and animals. 


Structure of prokaryotes

Prokaryotic cells are relatively small, ranging in size from 0.0001 to 0.003 mm (0.000004 to 0.0001 in) in diameter. With the exception of a few species, prokaryotic cells are surrounded by a protective cell wall. Just inside the cell wall of prokaryotes is the plasma membrane, a thin structure that is both flexible and strong. In both prokaryotes and eukaryotes, the plasma membrane is composed of two layers of phospholipid molecules interspersed with proteins, and regulates the traffic that flows in and out of the cell. The prokaryotic plasma membrane, however, carries out additional functions. It participates in replication of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) for cell division and synthesis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP), an energy molecule. In some prokaryotes, the plasma membrane is essential for photosynthesis, the process that uses light energy to convert carbon dioxide and water to glucose. 

Reproduction of Prokaryotes

Most prokaryotes multiply by the asexual process of binary fission, in which the DNA of the organism replicates in the cytoplasm, the cell divides in two, and one DNA molecule passes to each newly formed cell. In addition, some prokaryotes undergo various processes of genetic recombination. For example, in the process called transformation, a bacterium removes one or more genes from one organism and incorporates the genes into its own genetic makeup. In conjugation two organisms exchange genes. In transduction a virus transports bacterial genes from one organism to another. Gene transfers account for the appearance of new biochemical traits in prokaryotes.



Nutrition
Like most organisms, prokaryotes require carbon and energy to create nutrients such as carbohydrates, proteins, lipids, and nucleic acids. Prokaryotes obtain carbon and energy from a variety of sources. Certain prokaryotes use carbon dioxide as their carbon source. Called autotrophs, these prokaryotes derive energy from different sources, such as photosynthesis or inorganic molecules. Photoautotrophs, including the cyanobacteria and the green sulfur and purple sulfur archaebacteria, derive their energy from light. Chemoautotrophs, such as the soil bacteria Nitrobacter and Nitrosomonas, derive their energy from inorganic compounds such as hydrogen sulfide, ammonia, and iron. Heterotrophs are organisms that rely on ready-made organic compounds such as glucose or alcohol for their carbon source. Heterotrophs obtain energy by degrading organic molecules, such as plant or animal matter. A small group of bacteria, the photoheterotrophs, use light as their energy source, while chemo heterotrophs use organic compounds for both their carbon and energy sources. 


Importance of Prokaryotes

Prokaryotes play significant roles in our daily lives. In a process called nitrogen fixation, many species of cyanobacteria convert atmospheric nitrogen to nitrogenous compounds that other organisms use as food sources. Moreover, the photosynthesis occurring in cyanobacteria still contributes substantial amounts of oxygen to the atmosphere and stores the Sun’s energy in carbohydrate molecules. Cyanobacteria are the foundation for aquatic ecosystems, providing food for protozoa and other aquatic organisms. Cyanobacteria are threatened, however, by ultraviolet radiation, which penetrates the atmosphere as a result of the thinning ozone layer.
 
 


Monday, January 14, 2013

KINGDOM



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Kingdom Monera OR Prokaryote

Prokaryote, relatively simple unicellular organism, such as a bacterium, characterized by the absence of a nucleus and other specialized cell structures. Scientists distinguish prokaryotes from eukaryotes, which are more complex organisms with cells that contain a nucleus, such as plants and animals.
Examples 
 Virus, Bacteria, Cynobacteria (Blue Green Algae).



Kingdom Protista
All unicellular eukaryotic organisms included in this kingdom. They have distinct nucleus and perform all living activities with in singular cell. These have little complex cell structure then prokaryotes.
Examples 
Amobea, Euglena, Paramacium etc

Kingdom Fungi

Fungi, also eukaryotic and long considered members of the plant kingdom, have now been placed in a separate kingdom because they lack chlorophyll and plastids and because their rigid cell walls contain chitin rather than cellulose. Unlike the majority of plants, fungi do not manufacture their own food; instead they are saprophytic, absorbing their food from either dead or living organic matter.
Example 
Mashroom, Pancillium etc


Kingdom Plantae

Plant cells have all the components of animal cells and boast several added features, including chloroplasts, a central vacuole, and a cell wall. Chloroplasts convert light energy—typically from the Sun—into the sugar glucose, a form of chemical energy, in a process known as photosynthesis. Chloroplasts, like mitochondria, possess a circular chromosome and prokaryote-like ribosome, which manufacture the proteins that the chloroplasts typically need.
Examples are All plants


Kingdom animalae
Eukaryotic cells are typically about ten times larger than prokaryotic cells. In animal cells, the plasma membrane, rather than a cell wall, forms the cell’s outer boundary. With a design similar to the plasma membrane of prokaryotic cells, it separates the cell from its surroundings and regulates the traffic across the membrane.