Organelle
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In cell biology, an organelle is a discrete structure of a cell having specialized functions. There are many types of organelles, particularly in the eukaryotic cells of higher organisms. An organelle is to the cell what an organ is to the body (hence the name organelle, the suffix -elle being a diminutive). Organelles were historically identified through the use of microscopy, and were also identified through the use of cell fractionation.
Although the term "organelle" is considered in some cell biology spheres to be synonymous with "cell compartment", some cell biologists strictly limit the term's definition to DNA-containing, formerly autonomous organisms, which were acquired by primary, secondary, or tertiary endosymbiosis. A few of such large organelles probably having originated from endosymbiont bacteria include:
- mitochondria (in almost all eukaryotes)
- plastids (in plants and algae)
- chloroplasts, mature forms of etioplasts
- chromoplasts
- leucoplasts
- amyloplasts
- elaioplasts
- proteinoplasts
- rhodoplasts
- apicoplasts
Further organelles are suggested to have had endosymbiotic origins (notably the flagellum; see evolution of flagella), but these theories are neither widely accepted nor phylogenetically verified.
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[edit] Eukaryotic organelles
Eukaryotes are the most structurally complex known cell type, and by definition are in part organized by smaller interior compartments, that are themselves enclosed by lipid membranes that resemble the outermost cell membrane. The larger organelles, such as the nucleus and vacuoles, are easily visible with moderate magnification (although sometimes a clear view requires the application of chemicals that selectively stain parts of the cells); they were among the first biological discoveries made after the invention of the microscope.
Not all eukaryotic cells have all of the organelles listed below, and occasionally, exceptional species of cells are missing organelles which might otherwise be considered universal to eukaryotic cells (such as mitochondria). There are also occasional exceptions to the number of membranes surrounding organelles, listed in the tables below (e.g. some which are listed as double-membraned are sometimes found with single or triple membranes).
Organelle | Main function | Structure | Organisms | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
chloroplast (plastid) | photosynthesis | double-membrane compartment | plants, protists | has some genes |
endoplasmic reticulum | modification and folding of new proteins and lipids | single-membrane compartment | all eukaryotes | |
Golgi apparatus | sorting and modification of proteins | single-membrane compartment | all eukaryotes | |
mitochondrion | energy production | double-membrane compartment | most eukaryotes | has some genes |
vacuole | storage & homeostasis | single-membrane compartment | eukaryotes | |
nucleus | DNA maintenance & transcription to RNA | double-membrane compartment | all eukaryotes | has bulk of genome |
Organelles which have double-membranes and their own DNA are believed by many biologists of having originally come from incompletely consumed or invading prokaryotic cells, which were adopted as a part of the invaded cell through endosymbiosis. Originally, the word organelle referred to large lipid-encased formerly autonomous endosymbiont within cells. As other intracellular compartments were discovered, the meaning was generalized (in the United States, mainly) to include any lipid-encased intracellular component with a specialized biochemical function.
Organelle | Main function | Structure | Organisms |
---|---|---|---|
acrosome | helps spermatoza fuse with ovum | single-membrane compartment | many animals |
centriole | anchor for cytoskeleton | Microtubule protein | animals |
cilium | movement in or of external medium | Microtubule protein | animals, protists, few plants |
glyoxysome | conversion of fat into sugars | single-membrane compartment | plants |
hydrogenosome | energy & hydrogen production | double-membrane compartment | a few unicellular eukaryotes |
lysosome | breakdown of large molecules | single-membrane compartment | most eukaryotes |
melanosome | pigment storage | single-membrane compartment | animals |
mitosome | not characterized | double-membrane compartment | a few unicellular eukaryotes |
myofibril | muscular contraction | bundled filaments | animals |
nucleolus | ribosome production | protein-DNA-RNA | most eukaryotes |
parenthesome | not characterized | not characterized | fungi |
peroxisome | oxidation of protein | single-membrane compartment | all eukaryotes |
ribosome | translation of RNA into proteins | RNA-protein | eukaryotes & prokaryotes |
vesicle | miscellaneous | single-membrane compartment | all eukaryotes |
Other related structures:
[edit] Prokaryotic organelles
Prokaryotes are not as structurally complex as eukaryotes, and do not have any compartments enclosed by lipid membranes. In the past they were often viewed as having little internal organization, but slowly details are emerging about prokaryotic internal structures. One contributing discovery was that at least some prokaryotes have microcompartments, which are compartments enclosed by proteins.
Organelle | Main function | Structure | Organisms |
---|---|---|---|
carboxysome | carbon fixation | protein-shell compartment | some bacteria |
flagellum | movement in external medium | protein filament | some prokaryotes and eukaryotes |
magnetosome | magnetic orientation | inorganic crystal, protein | magnetotactic bacteria |
nucleoid | DNA maintenance & transcription to RNA | DNA-protein | prokaryotes |
plasmid | DNA exchange | circular DNA | some bacteria |
ribosome | translation of RNA into proteins | RNA-protein | eukaryotes & prokaryotes |
thylakoid | photosynthesis | photosystem proteins and pigments | mostly cyanobacteria |
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- Alberts, Bruce et al. (2002). The Molecular Biology of the Cell, 4th ed., Garland Science, 2002, ISBN 0-8153-3218-1.
- Kerfeld, Cheryl A et al., Protein Structures Forming the Shell of Primitive Bacterial Organelles, Science 309:936-938 (5 August 2005).
Organelles of the cell |
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Acrosome | Cell wall | Cell membrane | Chloroplast | Cilium/Flagellum | Centrosome | Cytoplasm | Endoplasmic reticulum | Endosome | Golgi apparatus | Lysosome | Melanosome | Mitochondrion | Myofibril | Nucleus | Nucleolus (sub-organelle, found within the nucleus) | Parenthesome | Peroxisome | Plastid | Ribosome | Vacuole | Vesicle |