Intercellular communication
Formation of a multicellular organism starts with a small collection of similar cells in an embryo and proceeds by continuous cell division and specialization to produce an entire community of cooperating cells, each with its own role in the life of the organism. Through cell cooperation, the organism becomes much more than the sum of its component parts.
A fertilized egg multiplies and produces a whole family of daughter cells, each of which adopts a structure and function according to its position in the entire assembly. All of the daughter cells contain the same chromosomes and therefore the same genetic information. Despite this common inheritance, different types of cells behave differently and have different structures. In order for this to be the case, they must express different sets of genes, so that they produce different proteins despite their identical embryological ancestors.
During the development of an embryo, it is not sufficient for all the cell types found in the fully developed individual simply to be created. Each cell type must form in the right place at the right time and in the correct proportion; otherwise, there would be a jumble of randomly assorted cells in no way resembling an organism. The orderly development of an organism depends on a process called cell determination, in which initially identical cells become committed to different pathways of development. A fundamental part of cell determination is the ability of cells to detect different chemicals within different regions of the embryo. The chemical signals detected by one cell may be different from the signals detected by its neighbour cells. The signals that a cell detects activate a set of genes that tell the cell to differentiate in ways appropriate for its position within the embryo. The set of genes activated in one cell differs from the set of genes activated in the cells around it. The process of cell determination requires an elaborate system of cell-to-cell communication in early embryos.
Bruce M. AlbertsThe cell membrane
A thin membrane, typically between 4 and 10 nanometers (nm; 1 nm = 10−9 metre) in thickness, surrounds every living cell, delimiting the cell from the environment around it. Enclosed by this cell membrane (also known as the plasma membrane) are the cell’s constituents, often large, water-soluble, highly charged molecules such as proteins, nucleic acids, carbohydrates, and substances involved in cellular metabolism. Outside the cell, in the surrounding water-based environment, are ions, acids, and alkalis that are toxic to the cell, as well as nutrients that the cell must absorb in order to live and grow. The cell membrane, therefore, has two functions: first, to be a barrier keeping the constituents of the cell in and unwanted substances out and, second, to be a gate allowing transport into the cell of essential nutrients and movement from the cell of waste products.
Chemical composition and membrane structure
Most current knowledge about the biochemical constituents of cell membranes originates in studies of red blood cells. The chief advantage of these cells for experimental purposes is that they may be obtained easily in large amounts and that they have no internal membranous organelles to interfere with study of their cell membranes. Careful studies of these and other cell types have shown that all membranes are composed of proteins and fatty-acid-based lipids. Membranes actively involved in metabolism contain a higher proportion of protein; thus, the membrane of the mitochondrion, the most rapidly metabolizing organelle of the cell, contains as much as 75 percent protein, while the membrane of the Schwann cell, which forms an insulating sheath around many nerve cells, has as little as 20 percent protein.