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Do different environments exist in a cell? |
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| Jun23-12, 08:38 AM | #1 |
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Do different environments exist in a cell?
I read in a book concerning cell biology:
"Many enzymes are also greatly affected by the precise chemical environment around them." I understand that enzymes are affected by their respective environments. The book's sentence seems to indicate that different environments exist in the same cell (which then go on to affect enzymes in different ways). Now since the interior of the cell is a fluid environment and that due to random thermal motion of the molecules everything in the cell is uniformly distributed throughout the cell so only one environment will exist in the cell. The environment present anywhere in a cell will exist everywhere else in the cell (except in the membrane bounded organelles). So could someone tell me whether only one or different environments exist in a cell. |
| Jun24-12, 09:30 PM | #2 |
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Organelles are the only way to maintain different environments. It seems you've answered your own question.
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| Jun24-12, 10:23 PM | #3 |
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| Jun24-12, 10:33 PM | #4 |
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Recognitions:
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Do different environments exist in a cell?
Emerging research suggests that certain constricted regions of cells, for examples the spines containing post-synaptic terminals in neurons, can have distinct chemical microenvironments. These microenvironments mainly exist for calcium signaling because calcium is rapidly sequestered by various calcium-binding proteins and other processes so that calcium concentrations are only elevated near the channels that bring calcium into the cell.
For more information see the following perspective in Science: |
| Jun25-12, 04:01 AM | #5 |
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Thanks guys. I get it now.
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| Jun25-12, 08:11 AM | #6 |
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Recognitions:
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It's also worth mentioning that pH varies within a cell: the mitochondria have an interior pH significantly more acidic; the golgi apparatus has a pH gradient, and lysosomes are acidic as well.
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| Jun27-12, 07:29 PM | #7 |
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A eukaryote cell is divided into different organelles by cell membranes. Some molecules are suspended in the liquid. The liquid in one organelle is in a different environment then the liquid in another organelle. Bacterial cells are slightly different because they don't have organelles. However, there are features on the cell membranes of bacteria that provide different environments for molecules. However, there are fewer environments in a typical bacterial cell then there are in a typical eukaryote cell. The chromosomes are made of histone protein molecules wrapped up in DNA molecules. DNA in one part of the chromosome is in a different environment then the DNA wrapped up in another part of the histone. Some of the so called epigenetic effects are dominated by the position of a DNA molecule relative to different parts of the histone. |
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