1 00:00:01 --> 00:00:04 As I'm going to argue repeatedly today, biology has become a science 2 00:00:04 --> 00:00:08 over the last 50 years. And, as a consequence, we can talk 3 00:00:08 --> 00:00:12 about some basic principles. We can talk about some laws and 4 00:00:12 --> 00:00:16 then begin to apply them to very interesting biological problems. 5 00:00:16 --> 00:00:20 And so our general strategy this semester, as it has been in the past, 6 00:00:20 --> 00:00:24 is to spend roughly the first half of the semester talking about the 7 00:00:24 --> 00:00:28 basic laws and rules that govern all forms of biological life 8 00:00:28 --> 00:00:34 on this planet. And you can see some of the specific 9 00:00:34 --> 00:00:40 kinds of problems, including the problem of cancer, 10 00:00:40 --> 00:00:46 how cancer cells begin to grow abnormally, how viruses proliferate, 11 00:00:46 --> 00:00:52 how the immune system functions, how the nervous system functions, 12 00:00:52 --> 00:00:58 stem cells and how they work and their impact on modern biology, 13 00:00:58 --> 00:01:04 molecular medicine, and finally perhaps the future of biology and 14 00:01:04 --> 00:01:09 even certain aspects of evolution. The fact of the matter is that we 15 00:01:09 --> 00:01:13 now understand lots of these things in ways that were inconceivable 50 16 00:01:13 --> 00:01:18 years ago. And now we could begin to talk about things that 50 years 17 00:01:18 --> 00:01:22 ago people could not have dreamt of. When I took this course, and I did 18 00:01:22 --> 00:01:26 take it in 1961, we didn't know about 80% of what we 19 00:01:26 --> 00:01:31 now know. You cannot say that about mechanics 20 00:01:31 --> 00:01:35 in physics, you cannot say that about circuit theory in electronics, 21 00:01:35 --> 00:01:40 and you cannot say that, obviously, about chemistry. 22 00:01:40 --> 00:01:44 And I'm mentioning that to you simply because this field has 23 00:01:44 --> 00:01:48 changed enormously over the ensuing four decades. I won't tell you what 24 00:01:48 --> 00:01:53 grade I got in 7. 1 because if I would, 25 00:01:53 --> 00:01:57 and you might pry it out of me later in the semester, 26 00:01:57 --> 00:02:02 you probably would never show up again in lecture. 27 00:02:02 --> 00:02:06 But in any case, please know that this has been an 28 00:02:06 --> 00:02:11 area of enormous ferment. And the reason it's been in such 29 00:02:11 --> 00:02:16 enormous ferment is of the discovery in 1953 by Watson and Crick of the 30 00:02:16 --> 00:02:21 structure of the DNA double helix. Last year I said that we were so 31 00:02:21 --> 00:02:25 close to this discovery that both Watson and Crick are alive and with 32 00:02:25 --> 00:02:30 us and metabolically active, and more than 50 years, well, 33 00:02:30 --> 00:02:35 exactly 50 years after the discovery. Sadly, several months ago one of the 34 00:02:35 --> 00:02:39 two characters, Francis Crick died well into his 35 00:02:39 --> 00:02:43 eighties, and so he is no longer with us. But I want to impress on 36 00:02:43 --> 00:02:47 you the notion that 200 years from now, we will talk about Watson and 37 00:02:47 --> 00:02:51 Crick the same way that people talk about Isaac Newton in terms of 38 00:02:51 --> 00:02:55 physics. And that will be so because we are only beginning to 39 00:02:55 --> 00:02:59 perceive the ramifications of this enormous revolution that was 40 00:02:59 --> 00:03:02 triggered by their discovery. That is the field of molecular 41 00:03:02 --> 00:03:06 biology and genetics and biochemistry which has totally 42 00:03:06 --> 00:03:10 changed our perceptions of how life on Earth is actually organized. 43 00:03:10 --> 00:03:14 Much of the biology to which you may have been exposed until now has 44 00:03:14 --> 00:03:17 been a highly descriptive science. That is you may have had courses in 45 00:03:17 --> 00:03:21 high school where you had to memorize the names of different 46 00:03:21 --> 00:03:25 organisms, where you had to understand how evolutionary 47 00:03:25 --> 00:03:29 phylogenies were organized, where you had to learn the names of 48 00:03:29 --> 00:03:33 different organelles, and that biology was, for you, 49 00:03:33 --> 00:03:37 a field of memorization. And one point we would like, 50 00:03:37 --> 00:03:41 hopefully successfully, to drive home this semester is the notion 51 00:03:41 --> 00:03:46 that biology has now achieved a logical and rational coherence that 52 00:03:46 --> 00:03:50 allows us to articulate a whole set of rules that explain how all life 53 00:03:50 --> 00:03:54 forms on this planet are organized. It's no longer just a collection of 54 00:03:54 --> 00:03:59 jumbled facts. Indeed, if one masters these 55 00:03:59 --> 00:04:04 molecular and genetic principles, one can understand in principle a 56 00:04:04 --> 00:04:09 large number of processes that exist in the biosphere and begin to apply 57 00:04:09 --> 00:04:14 one's molecular biology to solving new problems in this arena. 58 00:04:14 --> 00:04:19 One of the important ideas that we'll refer to repeatedly this 59 00:04:19 --> 00:04:24 semester is the fact that many of the biological attributes that we 60 00:04:24 --> 00:04:29 posses now were already developed a very long time ago early in the 61 00:04:29 --> 00:04:34 inception of life on this planet. So if we look at the history of 62 00:04:34 --> 00:04:38 Earth, here the history of Earth is given as 5 billion years, 63 00:04:38 --> 00:04:42 this is in thousands obviously. The Earth is probably not that old. 64 00:04:42 --> 00:04:47 It's probably 4.5 or 4 or 3 billion years but, anyhow, 65 00:04:47 --> 00:04:51 that's when the planet first aggregated, as far as we know. 66 00:04:51 --> 00:04:56 One believes that no life existed for perhaps the first half billion 67 00:04:56 --> 00:05:00 years, but after half a billion years, which is a lot of time to be 68 00:05:00 --> 00:05:04 sure, there already begins to be traces of life forms on the surface 69 00:05:04 --> 00:05:08 of this planet. And that, itself, 70 00:05:08 --> 00:05:11 is an extraordinary testimonial, a testimonial to how evolutionary 71 00:05:11 --> 00:05:15 processes occur. We don't know how many planets 72 00:05:15 --> 00:05:18 there are in the universe where similar things happened. 73 00:05:18 --> 00:05:21 And we don't know whether the solution that were arrived at by 74 00:05:21 --> 00:05:25 other life systems in other places in the universe, 75 00:05:25 --> 00:05:28 which we may or may not ever discover, were the similar solutions 76 00:05:28 --> 00:05:32 to the ones that have been arrived at here. 77 00:05:32 --> 00:05:35 It's clear, for example, that to the extent that Darwinian 78 00:05:35 --> 00:05:39 Evolution governs the development of life forms on this planet that is 79 00:05:39 --> 00:05:42 not an artifact of the Earth. Darwinian Evolution is a logic 80 00:05:42 --> 00:05:46 which is applicable to all life forms and all biosystems that may 81 00:05:46 --> 00:05:49 exist in the universe, even the ones we have not discovered. 82 00:05:49 --> 00:05:53 However, there are specific solutions that were arrived at 83 00:05:53 --> 00:05:56 during the development of life on Earth which may be peculiar to Earth. 84 00:05:56 --> 00:06:00 The structure of the DNA double helix. 85 00:06:00 --> 00:06:04 The use of ribose in deoxyribose. The choice of amino acids to make 86 00:06:04 --> 00:06:08 proteins. And those specific solutions may not be universal. 87 00:06:08 --> 00:06:12 Whether they're universal in the sense of existing in all life forms 88 00:06:12 --> 00:06:16 across the planet, the fact is that many of the 89 00:06:16 --> 00:06:20 biochemical and molecular solutions that are represented in our own 90 00:06:20 --> 00:06:24 cells today, these solutions, these problems were solved already 2 91 00:06:24 --> 00:06:29 and 3 billion years ago. And once they were solved they were 92 00:06:29 --> 00:06:34 kept and conserved almost unchanged for the intervening 2 or 3 billion 93 00:06:34 --> 00:06:38 years. And that strong degree of conservation means that we can begin 94 00:06:38 --> 00:06:43 to figure out what these principles were early on in evolution of life 95 00:06:43 --> 00:06:48 on this planet and begin to apply them to all modern life forms. 96 00:06:48 --> 00:06:53 From the point of view of evolution, almost all animals are identical in 97 00:06:53 --> 00:06:58 terms of their biochemistry and in terms of their physiology. 98 00:06:58 --> 00:07:01 The molecular biology of all eukaryotic cells, 99 00:07:01 --> 00:07:05 that is all cells that have nuclei in them, is almost the same. 100 00:07:05 --> 00:07:09 And, therefore, we're not going to focus much in this course this 101 00:07:09 --> 00:07:12 semester on specific species but rather focus on general principles 102 00:07:12 --> 00:07:16 that would allow us to understand the cells and the tissues and the 103 00:07:16 --> 00:07:20 physiological processes that are applicable to all species on the 104 00:07:20 --> 00:07:23 surface of the planet. Let's just look here and get us 105 00:07:23 --> 00:07:27 some perspective on this because, the fact of the matter is, is that 106 00:07:27 --> 00:07:31 multicellular life forms, like ourselves, we have, the average 107 00:07:31 --> 00:07:35 human being has roughly three or four or five times ten to the 108 00:07:35 --> 00:07:39 thirteenth cells in the body. That's an interesting figure. 109 00:07:39 --> 00:07:43 The average human being goes through roughly ten to the sixteenth 110 00:07:43 --> 00:07:47 cell divisions in a lifetime, i.e. ten to the sixteenth times in 111 00:07:47 --> 00:07:51 your body there will be cells that divide, grow and divide. 112 00:07:51 --> 00:07:55 Every day in your body there are roughly ten to the eleventh cells 113 00:07:55 --> 00:07:59 that grow and divide. Think of that, ten to the eleventh. 114 00:07:59 --> 00:08:03 And you can divide that by the number of minutes in a day and come 115 00:08:03 --> 00:08:07 up with an astounding degree of cellular replication going on. 116 00:08:07 --> 00:08:11 All of these processes can be traceable back to solutions that 117 00:08:11 --> 00:08:16 were arrived at very early in the evolution of life on this planet, 118 00:08:16 --> 00:08:21 perhaps 550, 600 million years ago when the first multicellular life 119 00:08:21 --> 00:08:26 forms began to evolve. Before that time, that is to say 120 00:08:26 --> 00:08:31 before 500 to 600 million years ago, there were single-cell organisms. 121 00:08:31 --> 00:08:36 For example, many of them survive to this day. There were yeast-like 122 00:08:36 --> 00:08:41 organisms. And there were bacteria. And we make one large and major 123 00:08:41 --> 00:08:47 distinction between the two major life forms on the planet in terms of 124 00:08:47 --> 00:08:52 cells. One are the prokaryotic cells. And these are the cells of 125 00:08:52 --> 00:08:58 bacteria, I'll show you an image of them shortly, which lack nuclei. 126 00:08:58 --> 00:09:02 And the eukaryotic cells which poses nuclei and indeed have a highly 127 00:09:02 --> 00:09:06 complex cytoplasm and overall cellular architecture. 128 00:09:06 --> 00:09:10 We think that the prokaryotic life forms on this planet evolved first 129 00:09:10 --> 00:09:15 probably on the order of 3 billion years ago, maybe 3. 130 00:09:15 --> 00:09:19 billion years ago, and that about 1. billion years ago cells evolved 131 00:09:19 --> 00:09:23 that contained nuclei. Again, I'll show them to you 132 00:09:23 --> 00:09:28 shortly. And these nucleated cells, 133 00:09:28 --> 00:09:32 the eukaryotes then existed in single-cell form for perhaps the 134 00:09:32 --> 00:09:37 next 700 or 800 million years until multi-cellular aggregates of 135 00:09:37 --> 00:09:41 eukaryotic cells first assembled to become the ancestors of the 136 00:09:41 --> 00:09:45 multi-cellular plants and the multi-cellular animals that exist on 137 00:09:45 --> 00:09:50 the surface of the Earth today. To put that in perspective, our 138 00:09:50 --> 00:09:54 species has only been on the planet for about 150, 139 00:09:54 --> 00:09:59 00 years. So we've all been here for that period of time. 140 00:09:59 --> 00:10:03 And a 150,000 sounds like a long time, in one sense, 141 00:10:03 --> 00:10:08 but it's just “a blink in the eye of the Lord” as one says in terms of 142 00:10:08 --> 00:10:12 the history of life on this planet, and obviously the history of the 143 00:10:12 --> 00:10:17 universe which is somewhere between 13 and 15 billion years old. 144 00:10:17 --> 00:10:22 You can begin to see that the appearance of humans represents a 145 00:10:22 --> 00:10:27 very small segment of the entire history of life on this planet. 146 00:10:27 --> 00:10:32 And here you can roughly see the way that life has developed during this 147 00:10:32 --> 00:10:37 period of time from the fossil record. You see that many plants 148 00:10:37 --> 00:10:42 actually go back a reasonable length of time, but not more than maybe 300 149 00:10:42 --> 00:10:47 or 400 million years. Here are the Metazoa. 150 00:10:47 --> 00:11:00 And this represents -- 151 00:11:00 --> 00:11:07 Well, can you hear me? Wow, 614 came in handy. 152 00:11:07 --> 00:11:15 OK. So if we talk about another major division, 153 00:11:15 --> 00:11:22 we talk about protozoa and metazoa. The suffix zoa refers to animals, 154 00:11:22 --> 00:11:30 as in a zoo. And the protozoa represents single-cell organisms. 155 00:11:30 --> 00:11:34 The metazoa represent multi-cellular organisms. And we're going to be 156 00:11:34 --> 00:11:38 focusing largely on the biology of metazoan cells this semester, 157 00:11:38 --> 00:11:43 and we're going to be spending almost no time on plants. 158 00:11:43 --> 00:11:47 It's not that plants aren't important. It's just that we don't 159 00:11:47 --> 00:11:52 have time to cover everything. And, indeed, the molecular biology 160 00:11:52 --> 00:11:56 that you learn this semester will ultimately enable you to understand 161 00:11:56 --> 00:12:01 much about the physiology of multi-cellular plants which happen 162 00:12:01 --> 00:12:05 to be called metaphyta, a term you may never hear again in 163 00:12:05 --> 00:12:10 your entire life after today. That reminds me, 164 00:12:10 --> 00:12:14 by the way, that both Dr. Lander and I sometimes use big words. 165 00:12:14 --> 00:12:18 And people come up to me afterwards each semester each year and say 166 00:12:18 --> 00:12:22 Professor Weinberg, why don't you talk simple, 167 00:12:22 --> 00:12:26 why don't you talk the way we heard things in high school? 168 00:12:26 --> 00:12:30 And please understand that if I use big words sometimes it's to broaden 169 00:12:30 --> 00:12:34 your vocabulary so you can learn big words. 170 00:12:34 --> 00:12:37 One of the things you should be able, one of the big take-home lessons of 171 00:12:37 --> 00:12:41 this course should be that your vocabulary is expanded. 172 00:12:41 --> 00:12:44 Not just your scientific vocabulary but your general working English 173 00:12:44 --> 00:12:48 vocabulary. Perhaps the biggest goal of this course, 174 00:12:48 --> 00:12:51 by the way, is not that you learn the names of all the organelles and 175 00:12:51 --> 00:12:55 cells but that you learn how to think in a scientific and rational 176 00:12:55 --> 00:12:59 way. Not just because of this course but that this course 177 00:12:59 --> 00:13:02 helps you to do so. And as such, we don't place that 178 00:13:02 --> 00:13:06 much emphasis on memorization but to be able to think logically about 179 00:13:06 --> 00:13:10 scientific problems. Here we can begin to see the 180 00:13:10 --> 00:13:14 different kinds of metazoa, the animals. Here are the metaphyta 181 00:13:14 --> 00:13:17 and here are the protozoa, different words for all of these. 182 00:13:17 --> 00:13:21 And here we see our own phylum, the chordates. And, 183 00:13:21 --> 00:13:25 again, keep in mind that this line right down here is about 550 to 600 184 00:13:25 --> 00:13:29 million years ago, just to give you a time scale for 185 00:13:29 --> 00:13:33 what's been going on, on this planet. 186 00:13:33 --> 00:13:37 One point we'll return to repeatedly throughout the semester is that all 187 00:13:37 --> 00:13:41 life forms on this planet are related to one another. 188 00:13:41 --> 00:13:45 It's not as if life was invented multiple times on this planet and 189 00:13:45 --> 00:13:50 that there are multiple independent inventions to the extent that life 190 00:13:50 --> 00:13:54 arose more than once on this planet, and it may have. The other 191 00:13:54 --> 00:13:58 alternative or competing life forms were soon wiped out by our ancestors, 192 00:13:58 --> 00:14:03 our single-cellular ancestors 3 billion years ago. 193 00:14:03 --> 00:14:07 And, therefore, everything that exists today on this 194 00:14:07 --> 00:14:11 planet represents the descendents of that successful group of cells that 195 00:14:11 --> 00:14:15 existed a very long time ago. Here we have all this family tree 196 00:14:15 --> 00:14:20 of the different metazoan forms that have been created by the florid hand 197 00:14:20 --> 00:14:24 of evolution. And we're not going to study those phylogenies simply 198 00:14:24 --> 00:14:29 because we want to understand principles that explain all of them. 199 00:14:29 --> 00:14:32 Not just how this or that particular organism is able to digest its food 200 00:14:32 --> 00:14:35 or is able to reproduce. Here's another thing we're not 201 00:14:35 --> 00:14:38 going to talk about. We're not going to talk about 202 00:14:38 --> 00:14:42 complicated life forms. We're not going to talk very much, 203 00:14:42 --> 00:14:45 in fact hardly at all, about ecology. This is just one such thing, 204 00:14:45 --> 00:14:48 the way that a parasite is able to, a tapeworm is able to infect people. 205 00:14:48 --> 00:14:52 This is, again, I'm showing you this not to say this is what we're 206 00:14:52 --> 00:14:55 going to talk about, we're not going to talk about that. 207 00:14:55 --> 00:14:59 We're not going to talk about that. There's a wealth of detail that's 208 00:14:59 --> 00:15:03 known about the way life exists in the biosphere that we're simply 209 00:15:03 --> 00:15:07 going to turn our backs on by focusing on some basic principles. 210 00:15:07 --> 00:15:12 We're also not going to talk about anatomy. Here in quick order are 211 00:15:12 --> 00:15:16 some of the anatomies you may have learned about in high school, 212 00:15:16 --> 00:15:20 and I'm giving them to you each with a three-second minute, 213 00:15:20 --> 00:15:25 a three-second showing to say we're not going to do all this. 214 00:15:25 --> 00:15:29 And rather just to reinforce our focus, we're going to limit 215 00:15:29 --> 00:15:34 ourselves to a very finite part of the biosphere. 216 00:15:34 --> 00:15:37 And here is one way of depicting the biosphere. It's obviously an 217 00:15:37 --> 00:15:41 arbitrary way of doing so but it's quite illustrative. 218 00:15:41 --> 00:15:44 Here we start from molecules. And, in fact, we will occasionally 219 00:15:44 --> 00:15:48 go down to submolecular atoms. And here's the next dimension of 220 00:15:48 --> 00:15:52 complexity, organelles. That is these specialized little 221 00:15:52 --> 00:15:55 organs within cells. We're going to focus on them as 222 00:15:55 --> 00:15:59 well. We're going to focus on cells. And when we start getting to 223 00:15:59 --> 00:16:03 tissues, we're going to start not talking so much about them. 224 00:16:03 --> 00:16:07 And we're not going to talk about organisms and organs or entire 225 00:16:07 --> 00:16:12 organisms or higher complex ecological communities. 226 00:16:12 --> 00:16:16 And the reason we're doing that is that for 40 years in this department, 227 00:16:16 --> 00:16:21 and increasingly in the rest of the world there is the acceptance of the 228 00:16:21 --> 00:16:25 notion that if we understand what goes on down here in these first 229 00:16:25 --> 00:16:30 three steps, we can understand almost everything else in principle. 230 00:16:30 --> 00:16:34 Of course, in practice we may not be able to apply those principles to 231 00:16:34 --> 00:16:38 how an organism works or to how the human brain works yet. 232 00:16:38 --> 00:16:42 Maybe we never will. But, in general, if one begins to 233 00:16:42 --> 00:16:46 understand these principles down here, one can understand much about 234 00:16:46 --> 00:16:50 how organismic embryologic develop occurs, one can understand a lot 235 00:16:50 --> 00:16:54 about a whole variety of disease processes, one can understand how 236 00:16:54 --> 00:16:58 one inherits disease susceptibilities, 237 00:16:58 --> 00:17:02 and one can understand why many organisms look the way they do, 238 00:17:02 --> 00:17:07 i.e. the process of developmental biology. 239 00:17:07 --> 00:17:11 And so, keep in mind that if you came to hear about all of these 240 00:17:11 --> 00:17:15 things, we're going to let you down. That's not what this is going to be 241 00:17:15 --> 00:17:19 about. This also dictates the dimensions of the universe that 242 00:17:19 --> 00:17:23 we're going to talk about because we're going to limit ourselves to 243 00:17:23 --> 00:17:27 the very, very small and not to the microscopic. On some occasions 244 00:17:27 --> 00:17:31 we'll limit ourselves to items that are so small you cannot see them in 245 00:17:31 --> 00:17:36 the light microscope. On other occasions we may widen our 246 00:17:36 --> 00:17:40 gaze to look at things that are as large as a millimeter, 247 00:17:40 --> 00:17:45 but basically we're staying very, very small. Again, because we view, 248 00:17:45 --> 00:17:50 correctly or not, the fact that the big processes can be understood by 249 00:17:50 --> 00:17:54 delving into the molecular details of what happens invisibly and cannot 250 00:17:54 --> 00:17:59 be seen by most ways of visualizing things, including the light and 251 00:17:59 --> 00:18:04 often even the electron microscope. Keep in mind that 50 years ago we 252 00:18:04 --> 00:18:08 didn't know any of this, for all practical purposes, 253 00:18:08 --> 00:18:12 or very little of this. And keep in mind that we're so close to this 254 00:18:12 --> 00:18:16 revolution that we don't really understand its ramifications. 255 00:18:16 --> 00:18:21 I imagine it will be another 50 years before we really begin to 256 00:18:21 --> 00:18:25 appreciate the fallout, the long-term consequences of this 257 00:18:25 --> 00:18:29 revolution in biology which began 51 years ago. And so you're part of 258 00:18:29 --> 00:18:34 that and you're going to experience it much more than my generation did. 259 00:18:34 --> 00:18:38 And indeed one of the reasons why MIT decided about 10 or 12 years ago 260 00:18:38 --> 00:18:42 that every MIT undergraduate needed to have at least one semester of 261 00:18:42 --> 00:18:47 biology is that biology, in the same way as physics and 262 00:18:47 --> 00:18:51 chemistry and math, has become an integral part of every 263 00:18:51 --> 00:18:55 educated person's knowledge-base in terms of their ability to deal with 264 00:18:55 --> 00:18:59 the world in a rational way. In terms of public policy, 265 00:18:59 --> 00:19:03 in terms of all kinds of ethical issues, they need to understand 266 00:19:03 --> 00:19:06 what's really going on. Many of the issues that one talks 267 00:19:06 --> 00:19:09 about today about bioethics are articulated by people who haven't 268 00:19:09 --> 00:19:13 the vaguest idea about what we're talking about this semester. 269 00:19:13 --> 00:19:16 You will know much more than they will, and hopefully some time down 270 00:19:16 --> 00:19:20 the road, when you become more and more influential voices in society, 271 00:19:20 --> 00:19:23 you'll be able to contribute what you understood here, 272 00:19:23 --> 00:19:27 what you learned here to that discussion. 273 00:19:27 --> 00:19:31 Right now much of bioethical discussion is fueled by people who 274 00:19:31 --> 00:19:35 haven't the vaguest idea what a ribosome or mitochondrion or even a 275 00:19:35 --> 00:19:39 gene is, and therefore is often a discussion of mutually shared 276 00:19:39 --> 00:19:43 ignorance which you can diffuse by learning some basics, 277 00:19:43 --> 00:19:47 by learning some of the essentials. Here is the complexity of the cell 278 00:19:47 --> 00:19:51 we're going to focus on largely this semester, which is to say the 279 00:19:51 --> 00:19:55 eukaryotic rather than the prokaryotic cell. 280 00:19:55 --> 00:19:59 And this is just to give you a feeling for the overall dimensions 281 00:19:59 --> 00:20:03 of the cell and refer to many of the landmarks that will repeatedly be 282 00:20:03 --> 00:20:08 brought up during the course of this semester. 283 00:20:08 --> 00:20:11 Here is the nucleus. The term karion comes from the 284 00:20:11 --> 00:20:15 Greek meaning a seed or a kernel. And the nucleus is what gives the 285 00:20:15 --> 00:20:19 eukaryotic cell its name. Within the nucleus, although not 286 00:20:19 --> 00:20:22 shown here, are the chromosomes which carry DNA. 287 00:20:22 --> 00:20:26 You may have learned that a long time ago. Outside of the nucleus is 288 00:20:26 --> 00:20:30 this entire vast array of organelles that goes from the nuclear membrane, 289 00:20:30 --> 00:20:34 and I'm point to it right here, all the way out to the outside 290 00:20:34 --> 00:20:37 of the cell. The outside limiting membrane, 291 00:20:37 --> 00:20:41 the outer membrane of the cell is called the plasma membrane. 292 00:20:41 --> 00:20:44 And between the nucleus and the plasma membrane there is an enormous 293 00:20:44 --> 00:20:48 amount of biological and biochemical activity taking place. 294 00:20:48 --> 00:20:52 Here are, for example, the mitochondria. And the 295 00:20:52 --> 00:20:55 mitochondria, as one has learned, are the sources of energy production 296 00:20:55 --> 00:20:59 in the cell. And, therefore, we'll touch on them very 297 00:20:59 --> 00:21:03 briefly. This is an artist's conception of 298 00:21:03 --> 00:21:07 what a mitochondrion looks like. Almost always artists' conceptions 299 00:21:07 --> 00:21:12 of these things have only vague resemblance to the reality. 300 00:21:12 --> 00:21:16 But, in any case, you can begin to get a feeling for what one thinks 301 00:21:16 --> 00:21:21 about their appearance. Here are mitochondria sliced open 302 00:21:21 --> 00:21:25 by the hand of the artist. And, interestingly, mitochondria 303 00:21:25 --> 00:21:30 have their own DNA in them. One now accepts the fact that 304 00:21:30 --> 00:21:34 mitochondria are the descendents of bacteria which insinuated themselves 305 00:21:34 --> 00:21:39 into the cytoplasms of larger cells, roughly 1.5 billion years ago, and 306 00:21:39 --> 00:21:43 began to do a specialized job which increasingly became the job of 307 00:21:43 --> 00:21:47 energy production within cells. To this day, mitochondria retain 308 00:21:47 --> 00:21:51 some vestigial attributes of the bacterial ancestors which initially 309 00:21:51 --> 00:21:54 colonized or parasitized the cytoplasm of the cell. 310 00:21:54 --> 00:21:58 When I say parasitized, you might imagine that the 311 00:21:58 --> 00:22:02 mitochondria are taking advantage of the cell. 312 00:22:02 --> 00:22:06 But, in fact, the mitochondria represent the essential sources of 313 00:22:06 --> 00:22:11 energy production in the cell. Without our mitochondria, as you 314 00:22:11 --> 00:22:16 might learn by taking cyanide, for example, you don't live for very 315 00:22:16 --> 00:22:20 many minutes. And the vestiges of bacterial origins of mitochondria 316 00:22:20 --> 00:22:25 are still apparent in the fact that mitochondria still have their own 317 00:22:25 --> 00:22:30 DNA molecule, their own chromosome. They still have their own ribosomes 318 00:22:30 --> 00:22:34 and protein synthetic apparatus, even though the vast majority of the 319 00:22:34 --> 00:22:39 proteins inside mitochondria are imported from the cytoplasm, 320 00:22:39 --> 00:22:43 i.e., these vestigial bacteria now rely on proteins made by the cell at 321 00:22:43 --> 00:22:48 large that are imported into the mitochondrion to supplement the 322 00:22:48 --> 00:22:53 small number of vestigial bacterial proteins which are still made here 323 00:22:53 --> 00:22:57 inside the mitochondrion and used for essential function 324 00:22:57 --> 00:23:01 in energy production. Here is the Golgi apparatus. 325 00:23:01 --> 00:23:05 And the Golgi apparatus up here is used for the production of membranes. 326 00:23:05 --> 00:23:08 As one will learn throughout the semester, the membranes of a cell 327 00:23:08 --> 00:23:12 are in constant flux and are being pulled in and remodeled and 328 00:23:12 --> 00:23:15 regenerated. The Golgi apparatus is very important for that. 329 00:23:15 --> 00:23:19 Here's the rough endoplasmic reticulum. That's important for the 330 00:23:19 --> 00:23:22 synthesis of proteins which are going to be displayed on the surface 331 00:23:22 --> 00:23:26 of cells, you don't see them depicted here, 332 00:23:26 --> 00:23:30 or are going to be secreted into the extracellular space. 333 00:23:30 --> 00:23:33 Here are the ribosomes, which I might have mentioned briefly 334 00:23:33 --> 00:23:37 before. And these ribosomes are the factories where proteins are made. 335 00:23:37 --> 00:23:41 Again, we're going to talk a lot about them. And, 336 00:23:41 --> 00:23:45 finally, several other aspects, the cytoskeleton. The physical 337 00:23:45 --> 00:23:49 integrity, the architecture of the cell is maintained by a complex 338 00:23:49 --> 00:23:53 network of proteins which together are considered to be the 339 00:23:53 --> 00:23:57 cytoskeleton. And they enable the cell to have some rigidity, 340 00:23:57 --> 00:24:01 to resist tensile forces, and actually to move. 341 00:24:01 --> 00:24:04 Cells can actually move from one place to the other. 342 00:24:04 --> 00:24:07 They have motile properties. They're able to move from one 343 00:24:07 --> 00:24:11 location to another. The process of cell motility, 344 00:24:11 --> 00:24:21 if that's a word you'd like to learn. 345 00:24:21 --> 00:24:23 Here is what a prokaryotic cell looks like by contrast. 346 00:24:23 --> 00:24:26 And I just want to give you a feeling. First of all, 347 00:24:26 --> 00:24:28 it looks roughly like a mitochondrion that I 348 00:24:28 --> 00:24:32 discussed before. But you see that there is the 349 00:24:32 --> 00:24:36 absence of a nuclear membrane. There's the absence of the highly 350 00:24:36 --> 00:24:41 complex cytoarchitecture. Cyto always refers to cells. 351 00:24:41 --> 00:24:45 There's the absence of the complex cytoarchitecture that one associates 352 00:24:45 --> 00:24:50 with eukaryotic cells. In fact, all that a bacterium has 353 00:24:50 --> 00:24:54 is this area in the middle. It's called the nucleoid, a term 354 00:24:54 --> 00:24:59 which you also will probably never hear in your lifetime. 355 00:24:59 --> 00:25:02 And it represents simply an aggregate of the DNA of the 356 00:25:02 --> 00:25:06 chromosomes of the bacterium. And, in most bacteria, the DNA 357 00:25:06 --> 00:25:10 consists of only a single molecule of DNA which is responsible for 358 00:25:10 --> 00:25:14 carrying the genetic information of the bacteria. There's no membrane 359 00:25:14 --> 00:25:18 around this nucleoid. And outside of this area where the 360 00:25:18 --> 00:25:22 DNA is kept are largely ribosomes which are important for protein 361 00:25:22 --> 00:25:26 synthesis. There's a membrane on the outside of this called the 362 00:25:26 --> 00:25:30 plasma membrane, very similar to the plasma membrane 363 00:25:30 --> 00:25:34 of eukaryotic cells. And outside of that is a meshwork 364 00:25:34 --> 00:25:38 that's called the outer membrane, it's sometimes called the cell wall 365 00:25:38 --> 00:25:42 of the bacterium, which is simply there to impart 366 00:25:42 --> 00:25:46 structural rigidity to the bacterium making sure that it doesn't explode 367 00:25:46 --> 00:25:50 and holding it together. And then there are other versions 368 00:25:50 --> 00:25:54 of eukaryotic cells. Here's what a plant cell looks like. 369 00:25:54 --> 00:25:58 And it's almost identical to the cells in our body, except 370 00:25:58 --> 00:26:02 for two major features. For one thing, 371 00:26:02 --> 00:26:06 it has chloroplasts in it which are also, one believes now, 372 00:26:06 --> 00:26:10 the vestiges of parasitic bacteria that invade into the cytoplasm of 373 00:26:10 --> 00:26:14 eukaryotic cells. So, in addition to mitochondria 374 00:26:14 --> 00:26:18 which are responsible for energy production in all eukaryotic cells, 375 00:26:18 --> 00:26:22 we have here the chloroplasts which are responsible for harvesting light 376 00:26:22 --> 00:26:26 and converting it into energy in plant cells. The rest of the 377 00:26:26 --> 00:26:30 cytoplasm of a plant cell looks pretty much the same. 378 00:26:30 --> 00:26:34 One feature that I didn't really mention when I talked about an 379 00:26:34 --> 00:26:38 animal cell is in the middle of the nucleus, here you can see, 380 00:26:38 --> 00:26:42 is a structure called a nucleolus. And a nucleolus, or the nucleolus 381 00:26:42 --> 00:26:46 in the eukaryotic cell is responsible for making the large 382 00:26:46 --> 00:26:50 number of ribosomes which are exported from the nucleus into the 383 00:26:50 --> 00:26:54 cytoplasm. And, as I mentioned just before, 384 00:26:54 --> 00:26:59 the ribosomes are responsible for protein synthesis. 385 00:26:59 --> 00:27:03 It turns out this is a major synthetic effort on the part of most 386 00:27:03 --> 00:27:07 cells. Cells, like our own, have between 5 and 10 387 00:27:07 --> 00:27:11 million ribosomes in the cytoplasm. So it's an enormous amount of 388 00:27:11 --> 00:27:15 biomass in the cytoplasm whose sole function is to synthesize proteins. 389 00:27:15 --> 00:27:19 As we will learn also, proteins that are synthesized by the 390 00:27:19 --> 00:27:23 ribosomes don't sit around forever. Some proteins have long lives. 391 00:27:23 --> 00:27:27 Some proteins have lifetimes of 15 minutes before they're degraded, 392 00:27:27 --> 00:27:32 before they're turned over. One other distinction between our 393 00:27:32 --> 00:27:36 cells, that is the cells of metazoa and metaphyta, 394 00:27:36 --> 00:27:40 are the cell walls, analogous to the cell walls of 395 00:27:40 --> 00:27:44 bacteria, this green thing on the outside. As I said before, 396 00:27:44 --> 00:27:48 we do not have cell walls around our cells. And we will, 397 00:27:48 --> 00:27:52 as the semester goes on, go into more and more details about 398 00:27:52 --> 00:27:56 different aspects of this cytoarchitecture during the first 399 00:27:56 --> 00:27:59 half of the semester. Here, for example, 400 00:27:59 --> 00:28:03 is an artist's depiction of the endoplasmic reticulum. 401 00:28:03 --> 00:28:07 Why it has such a complex name, I cannot tell you, but it does. 402 00:28:07 --> 00:28:11 It's called the ER in the patois of the street. The ER. 403 00:28:11 --> 00:28:14 And the endoplasmic reticulum is a series of membranes. 404 00:28:14 --> 00:28:18 Keep in mind, not the only membrane in the cell is the plasma membrane. 405 00:28:18 --> 00:28:22 Within the cytoplasm there are literally hundreds of membranes 406 00:28:22 --> 00:28:26 which are folded up in different ways. 407 00:28:26 --> 00:28:30 Here you see them depicted. And one set of these membranes, 408 00:28:30 --> 00:28:34 often they're organized much like tubes, represents the membranes of 409 00:28:34 --> 00:28:38 the endoplasmic reticulum which either lacks ribosomes attached to 410 00:28:38 --> 00:28:43 it or has these ribosomes attached to it which cause this to be called 411 00:28:43 --> 00:28:47 the rough endoplasmic reticulum to refer to its rough structure which 412 00:28:47 --> 00:28:52 is created by the studding of ribosomes on the surface. 413 00:28:52 --> 00:28:55 As we will learn, just trying to give you a feeling 414 00:28:55 --> 00:28:59 for the geography of what we're going to talk about this semester, 415 00:28:59 --> 00:29:03 these ribosomes on the surface of the endoplasmic reticulum are 416 00:29:03 --> 00:29:07 dedicated to the task of making highly specialized proteins which 417 00:29:07 --> 00:29:11 are either going to be dispatched to the surface of the cell where they 418 00:29:11 --> 00:29:15 will be displayed on the cell's surface or actually secreted into 419 00:29:15 --> 00:29:19 the extracellular space. Many of the proteins that are 420 00:29:19 --> 00:29:23 destined for our body are not kept within cells but are released into 421 00:29:23 --> 00:29:27 the extracellular space where they serve important functions, 422 00:29:27 --> 00:29:31 and so we're going to focus very much on them. 423 00:29:31 --> 00:29:35 Here's actually what some of these things look like in the electron 424 00:29:35 --> 00:29:39 microscope to see whether we can either believe or fully discredit 425 00:29:39 --> 00:29:43 the imaginations of the artists. Here's the rough endoplasmic 426 00:29:43 --> 00:29:48 reticulum I showed you in schematic form before. And you can see why 427 00:29:48 --> 00:29:52 it's called rough. All these black dots are ribosomes 428 00:29:52 --> 00:29:56 attached on the outside. Here's the Golgi apparatus. 429 00:29:56 --> 00:30:00 You see these vesicles indicated here. And a vesicle, 430 00:30:00 --> 00:30:05 just to use a new word, is simply a membranous bag. 431 00:30:05 --> 00:30:08 And keep in mind, by the way, that we're not going to 432 00:30:08 --> 00:30:12 spend the semester with these highly descriptive discussions. 433 00:30:12 --> 00:30:16 Our intent today is to get a lot of these descriptive discussions out of 434 00:30:16 --> 00:30:19 the way so that we can begin to talk in a common parlance about many of 435 00:30:19 --> 00:30:23 the parts, the molecular parts of cells and organisms. 436 00:30:23 --> 00:30:27 Here is the mitochondrion which we saw depicted before. 437 00:30:27 --> 00:30:31 It looks similar to, but not identical to the artist's 438 00:30:31 --> 00:30:34 description of that. And keep in mind that the 439 00:30:34 --> 00:30:38 mitochondrion in our cells, as I said before, are the 440 00:30:38 --> 00:30:42 descendents of parasitic bacteria. Here's the endoplasmic reticulum, 441 00:30:42 --> 00:30:46 and the way it would look, as it does in certain parts of the 442 00:30:46 --> 00:30:49 cell when it doesn't have all of these ribosomes studded on the 443 00:30:49 --> 00:30:53 surface. The endoplasmic reticulum here is involved in making membranes. 444 00:30:53 --> 00:30:57 The endoplasmic reticulum here is involved in the synthesis and export 445 00:30:57 --> 00:31:01 of proteins to the cell's surface and for secretion, as 446 00:31:01 --> 00:31:05 I mentioned before. Much of what we're going to talk 447 00:31:05 --> 00:31:09 about over the next days is going to be focused on the nucleus of the 448 00:31:09 --> 00:31:14 cell, that is on the chromosomes on the cell and on the material which 449 00:31:14 --> 00:31:19 is called chromatin which carries the genetic material. 450 00:31:19 --> 00:31:23 So the term chromatin is used in biology to refer simply to the 451 00:31:23 --> 00:31:28 mixture of DNA and proteins, which together constitutes the 452 00:31:28 --> 00:31:33 chromosomes. So chromatin has within it DNA, 453 00:31:33 --> 00:31:37 it has protein, and it has a little bit of RNA in it. 454 00:31:37 --> 00:31:42 And we're going to focus mostly on the DNA in the chromatin, 455 00:31:42 --> 00:31:46 because if we can begin to understand the way the DNA works and 456 00:31:46 --> 00:31:51 functions many other aspects will flow from that. 457 00:31:51 --> 00:31:55 I mentioned the cell's surface, and I just want to impress on you 458 00:31:55 --> 00:32:00 the fact that the plasma membrane of a cell is much more complicated than 459 00:32:00 --> 00:32:05 was depicted in these drawings that I showed you just before. 460 00:32:05 --> 00:32:08 If we had a way of visualizing the plasma membrane of a cell, 461 00:32:08 --> 00:32:12 we would discover that it's formed from lipids. We see such lipids 462 00:32:12 --> 00:32:16 there, phospholipids, many of them. We'll talk about them 463 00:32:16 --> 00:32:20 shortly. That the outside of the cell, there are many proteins, 464 00:32:20 --> 00:32:24 you see them here, which thread their way through the plasma 465 00:32:24 --> 00:32:28 membrane, have an extracellular and intracellular part. 466 00:32:28 --> 00:32:32 And these transmembrane proteins, which reach from outside to inside, 467 00:32:32 --> 00:32:36 represent a very important way by which the cell senses 468 00:32:36 --> 00:32:39 its environment. This plasma membrane, 469 00:32:39 --> 00:32:43 as we'll return to, represents a very effective barrier to segregate 470 00:32:43 --> 00:32:47 what's inside the cell from what's outside of the cell to increase 471 00:32:47 --> 00:32:51 concentrations of certain biochemical entities. 472 00:32:51 --> 00:32:54 But at the same time it creates a barrier to communication. 473 00:32:54 --> 00:32:58 And one of the things that cells have had to solve over the last 700 474 00:32:58 --> 00:33:02 to 800 million years is ways by which the exterior of the cell is 475 00:33:02 --> 00:33:06 able to send certain signals and transmit that information to the 476 00:33:06 --> 00:33:09 interior of the cell. At the same time, 477 00:33:09 --> 00:33:12 cells have had to use a number of different, invent a number of 478 00:33:12 --> 00:33:16 different proteins, some of them indicated here, 479 00:33:16 --> 00:33:19 which are able to transport materials from the outside of the 480 00:33:19 --> 00:33:22 cell into the cell, or visa versa. So the existence of 481 00:33:22 --> 00:33:25 the plasma membrane represents a boon to the cell in the sense that 482 00:33:25 --> 00:33:29 it's able to segregate what's on the inside from what's on the outside. 483 00:33:29 --> 00:33:33 But it represents an impediment to communication which had to be solved, 484 00:33:33 --> 00:33:37 as well as an impediment to transport. And many of these 485 00:33:37 --> 00:33:42 transmembrane proteins are dedicated to solving those particular problems. 486 00:33:42 --> 00:33:46 Here you see, once again an artist's depiction 487 00:33:46 --> 00:33:51 form, aspects of the cytoskeleton of the cell. And when we talk about 488 00:33:51 --> 00:33:55 the cytoskeleton we talk about this network of proteins which, 489 00:33:55 --> 00:34:00 as I said before, gives the cell rigidity. 490 00:34:00 --> 00:34:04 Keep in mind that the prefix cyto or the suffix cyt refers always to 491 00:34:04 --> 00:34:08 cells. Allows the cell to have shape. And here you can see this 492 00:34:08 --> 00:34:12 network as depicted in one way, but here it's depicted actually much 493 00:34:12 --> 00:34:17 more dramatically. And here you begin to see the 494 00:34:17 --> 00:34:21 complexity of what exists inside the cell. Here are these proteins. 495 00:34:21 --> 00:34:25 These are polymers of proteins called vimentin which are present in 496 00:34:25 --> 00:34:29 very many mesenchymal cells. Here are microtubules made from 497 00:34:29 --> 00:34:33 another kind of protein. Here are microfilaments, 498 00:34:33 --> 00:34:37 in this case made of the molecule actin. And if we looked at 499 00:34:37 --> 00:34:41 individual molecules of actin they would be invisible. 500 00:34:41 --> 00:34:45 This is end-to-end polymerization of many actin molecules. 501 00:34:45 --> 00:34:49 And we're looking here under the microscope from one end of the cell 502 00:34:49 --> 00:34:53 to the other end of the cell. And you can see how these molecules, 503 00:34:53 --> 00:34:57 they create stiffness, and they also enable the cell to 504 00:34:57 --> 00:35:00 contract and to move. Some people might think that the 505 00:35:00 --> 00:35:04 interior of the cell is just water with some molecules floating around 506 00:35:04 --> 00:35:08 them. But if you actually look at what's present in the cell, 507 00:35:08 --> 00:35:12 more than 50% of the volume is taken up by proteins. 508 00:35:12 --> 00:35:16 It's not simply an aqueous solvent where everything moves around freely. 509 00:35:16 --> 00:35:20 It's a very viscous slush, a mush. And it's quite difficult 510 00:35:20 --> 00:35:24 there for many cells to move around from one part of the 511 00:35:24 --> 00:35:27 cell to the other. Here you begin to get a feeling now 512 00:35:27 --> 00:35:31 for how the connection, which we'll reinforce shortly in 513 00:35:31 --> 00:35:35 great detail, between individual molecules and the cytoskeleton. 514 00:35:35 --> 00:35:38 And here you see these actin fibers. I showed them to you just moments 515 00:35:38 --> 00:35:42 ago stretching from one end of the cell to the other. 516 00:35:42 --> 00:35:46 And each of these little globules is a single actin monomer which 517 00:35:46 --> 00:35:50 polymerize end-to-end and then form multi-strand aggregates to create 518 00:35:50 --> 00:35:54 the actin cytoskeleton. Here's an intermediate filament and 519 00:35:54 --> 00:35:58 here's the microtubules that are formed, once again giving us this 520 00:35:58 --> 00:36:03 impression that the cell is actually highly organized and that that high 521 00:36:03 --> 00:36:07 degree of organization is able to give it some physical structure and 522 00:36:07 --> 00:36:12 shape and form. I think we're going to end today 523 00:36:12 --> 36:17 two minutes early. You probably won't object.