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Summary Lecture Notes Introduction to Cell Biology | Week 1 | Wageningen

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Lecture notes from Week 1 of Introduction to Cell Biology (CBI10806) at Wageningen University covering foundational cell theory and microscopy techniques. Topics include the central dogma of molecular biology, cell organization in prokaryotes, enzyme function and regulation, membrane structure, and detailed coverage of microscopy methods (light microscopy, fluorescence microscopy, and electron microscopy) with their respective resolutions and applications. These notes are essential for understanding core cell biology concepts and are particularly useful for exam preparation and grasping the technical fundamentals covered in the first week of the course.

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Introduction to cell biology week 1
Chapter 1
 All living organisms are constructed from one or more cells: small,
membrane-enclosed units filled with a concentrated aqueous
solution of chemicals and endowed with the extraordinary ability to
create copies of themselves by growing and then dividing in two
 Cells arise from pre-existing cells by growth and division. They do
not arise spontaneously
 Cells vary enormously, but all have a similar basic chemistry:
o Genetic information is carried in DNA molecules..
o .. and written in the same genetic code
The central dogma
 Genetic information is carried in DANN molecules
 Information in DNA is transcribed into RNA
 mRNA molecules are translated into proteins
cells under the microscope
 resolution (= resolving power): least distance at which
two points can be distinguished as individual points
 the resolution (d) can be determined as follows 
 λ = wavelength oft he light used
 N.A. = numerical aperture (written on the lens)
 A smaller d means a better resolution (so you see more details)
 When light with a shorter wavelength is used, for instance UV-light,
the value of ‘d’ becomes lower corresponding to an improved
resolving power
Improving contrast
 Limited absorption and light scattering by cells yields low image
contrast (exceptions: chloroplast and dense objects like cell wall).
 Histological stains improve contrast but are often incompatible with
live cells
Light microscope (LM)
 Absorption and scattering of photons (light)
 Glass lenses
 Cells in liquid (live cell imaging)
 Dynamic processes can be visualized
 Moderate magnification (103 x)
 Smallest distance resolvable is 200 nm (human eye is 200 µm)
 The diaphragm is varies to obtain the best contrast
 microtome
Fluorescence microscopy

,  Select fluorophores (dyes) bind to specific cellular structures (e.g.
DAPI – DNA; DIOC6 – lipid membranes)
 A fluorescent molecule (fluorophore) absorbs photons of a specific
colour (excitation) and produces photons with a longer
wavelength/less energy (emission)  a insertion of a colour filter
makes it possible to only display the emitted light in the final image
 Better contrast
 When multipule fluorophores become too close, they will not be
visible as individual items because of the limits in resotion
Electron microscopy (EM) (T = transmission) (S = scanning)
 No light but an electron beam
 Average wavelength electron beam: 0,004 nm
 Resolution around 0,1 nm (1x10-10 m)
 Absorption and scattering of electrons
 Magnetic lenses
 Cells in vacuum (fixed tussue)
 Heavy metals for contrast (e.g. OsO4)
 High magnification (106 x)
 Ultra-microtome
 SEM = shows surface structeres  scans the surface of the sample
using a focussed electron beam. A detector detects secondary
electrons that are generated at the surface. (frozen and/or
dehydrated)
Prokaryotes
 Prokaryotes (bacteria and archeae) have limited internal
organization
 Unicellular organisms, divided into two domains: bacteria and
archaea
 The cell wall found in prokaryotes are differend from the ones
found in eukaryotes
 Circular DNA strand is concentrated in the nucleoid, which
lacks a nuclear membrane
 Protein synthesis by ribosomes in the cytosol
 Some bacteria are photosynthetic
o Cyanobacteria are an phylum of bacteria that obtain
energy through photosynthesis
o Cyanobacteria are the precursors of chloroplast in plants 
important for live on earth
Eukaryotes
 Plants, animals, fungi
 Have membrane-enclosed organelles
 Internal membranes create distinct environments that enable
different chemical processes

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Uploaded on
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