Natural Sciences
Biology
Cell Biology
ElementScope CategorySub-ItemDefinitionCell Structure & Organelles
1. Domain1.1 Scope of the DomainBoundariesThe range of phenomena the science includes and excludes.Studies the architecture, composition, and function of intracellular compartments and structural systems. Includes membranes, organelles, cytoskeleton, and organelle biogenesis. Excludes tissue-level physiology and whole-cell behavior not tied directly to structural organization.
ScaleThe spatial, temporal, or organizational level at which the science operates (e.g., quantum, cellular, social, cosmic).Operates at nanometer–micrometer scales: membranes (5–10 nm), protein complexes (10–100 nm), organelles (0.1–10 µm). Temporal scales range from milliseconds (vesicle fusion) to hours/days (organelle turnover).
1.2 Ontological CommitmentsEntitiesThe kinds of things assumed to exist within the domain (particles, organisms, agents, fields, etc.).Organelles (nucleus, mitochondria, ER, Golgi, lysosome, peroxisome), cytoskeletal systems, membranes, vesicles, protein complexes, scaffolding assemblies.
PropertiesThe fundamental attributes these entities possess (mass, charge, genotype, preference, etc.).Morphology, membrane composition, protein content, lumenal environment, polarity, mechanical stiffness, pH gradients, ion conditions, dynamic remodeling capacity.
CategoriesThe basic ontological types used to classify domain elements (substances, processes, relations, structures).Membrane-bound vs non-membrane-bound organelles; biosynthetic vs degradative compartments; cytoskeletal systems (actin, microtubules, intermediate filaments); trafficking structures (vesicles, coats, motors).
1.3 State-VariablesVariablesThe measurable or definable properties that describe system conditions.Organelle size, shape, number, membrane curvature, protein concentration, lipid composition, pH, ion gradients, trafficking rate, cytoskeletal tension.
ParameterizationHow variables encode and represent the system’s state.Encoded through morphological descriptors (shape, volume, area), spatial position, molecular composition, and dynamic metrics (motility, turnover, fission/fusion rate).
1.4 Admissible IdealizationsSimplificationsConceptual reductions used to make the domain tractable (point masses, rational agents, perfect gases).Organelles treated as homogeneous compartments; membranes treated as continuous bilayers; protein complexes treated as rigid bodies; cytoskeletal elements treated as ideal polymers.
Validity ConditionsThe limits and contexts in which idealizations hold or break down.Break down when nanoscale heterogeneity, membrane microdomains, stochastic traffic noise, or pathological alterations distort structure or function.
1.5 Domain AssumptionsStructural AssumptionsBackground ontological stances such as determinism, continuity, randomness, discreteness.Intracellular organization is compartmentalized; organelles maintain stable identities; membranes act as selective barriers; cytoskeletal networks impose spatial order.
Implicit CommitmentsUnstated but necessary assumptions that shape the field’s conceptual structure.Organelle identity is self-maintaining; targeting pathways reliably sort proteins; membrane dynamics are coordinated; crowding effects remain manageable.
1.6 Internal Coherence RequirementsConsistencyThe demand that domain concepts do not contradict one another.Structural descriptions must align with biochemical functions, trafficking logic, and observed spatial organization.
CompatibilityThe requirement that entities, variables, and assumptions fit together into a unified descriptive framework.Membranes, organelles, protein sorting, and cytoskeletal organization must integrate into a unified, non-contradictory structural framework of the cell.
2. Evidence Layer2.1 Observable PhenomenaObservablesThe aspects of the domain that can produce detectable signals accessible to measurement.Organelle morphology, membrane topology, vesicle trafficking, cytoskeletal dynamics, protein localization patterns, organelle fusion/fission events, pH-dependent fluorescence, ion fluxes, and structural rearrangements.
Detection LimitsThe boundaries of what can be resolved or sensed by current instruments or methods.Resolution bounded by diffraction limits (~200 nm for light microscopy), super-resolution limits (~20–50 nm), EM limits (~1–2 nm), and temporal constraints of live-cell imaging (ms–s frame rates). Small complexes and rapid transitions fall below detection thresholds.
2.2 Measurement SystemsUnitsStandardized quantifications (meters, seconds, volts, decibels, dollars, etc.) necessary for consistent comparison.Measurements in nanometers (structure), micrometers (organelle size/location), seconds–minutes (dynamic events), fluorescence intensity (protein abundance), pH units, ionic concentrations, and molecular counts.
InstrumentsDevices and tools (microscopes, spectrometers, sensors, surveys, detectors) used to produce measurements.Light microscopes, confocal systems, super-resolution platforms (STED, SIM, PALM/STORM), electron microscopes, FRAP systems, FRET sensors, fluorescence probes, flow cytometers, atomic-force microscopes, live-cell imaging chambers.
2.3 Operational DefinitionsDefinitionsTerms defined by specific measurement procedures, ensuring empirical clarity.Organelle boundaries defined by membrane markers; trafficking rates defined by vesicle displacement over time; fusion events defined by fluorescent signal mixing; pH measured via ratiometric dye response; cytoskeletal dynamics defined by filament growth/shrinkage rates.
ProceduresThe explicit steps required to perform a measurement in a reproducible way.Standardized imaging protocols, fluorescent tagging workflows, fixation and staining procedures, live-cell imaging sequences, photobleaching/recovery steps, tracking particle motion, and quantifying intensity distributions.
2.4 Data AcquisitionProtocolsFormal processes for gathering data under controlled or standardized conditions.Controlled imaging sessions under defined temperature, illumination, and media conditions; standardized acquisition settings; repeated sampling for dynamic processes; consistent marker expression or labeling density.
SamplingRules determining which subset of the domain is measured and how representative it is.Selection of representative cells, organelles, or regions; temporal sampling sufficient to capture motion or remodeling; spatial sampling ensuring complete organelle coverage; avoidance of bias from cell-cycle stage or stress state.
2.5 Data Character & FormatData TypesThe form raw evidence takes (time series, spectra, images, counts, qualitative records).Fluorescent images, EM micrographs, time-lapse videos, intensity traces, particle-tracking coordinates, spectral signatures, structural reconstructions, segmentation masks, morphometric datasets.
ResolutionThe granularity or precision with which data is captured.Spatial resolution determined by optical or EM limits; temporal resolution set by frame rate; intensity resolution limited by sensor sensitivity and noise; structural resolution improved by averaging or reconstruction algorithms.
2.6 Reliability & CalibrationCalibrationAdjustment procedures ensuring instruments produce accurate results.Fluorescence calibration with known standards; EM calibration with lattice spacings; instrument alignment tests; correcting optical aberrations; standardizing exposure and gain; validating probe specificity.
Error CharacterizationIdentification and quantification of noise, uncertainty, bias, and measurement error.Identifying noise from photobleaching, drift, fixation artifacts, label heterogeneity, detector noise, segmentation errors, and sampling bias; partitioning systematic vs random error; quantifying uncertainty in morphometric measures.
3. Structural Layer3.1 Patterns & RegularitiesLaws / RelationsStable, repeatable patterns governing how observables behave across conditions.Organelle identity is maintained through specific protein/lipid compositions; trafficking directionality follows established routes (ER → Golgi → membrane/lysosome); cytoskeletal elements impose predictable transport and positioning patterns; membrane curvature correlates with protein scaffolding.
InvariantsQuantities or properties that remain constant under transformations (symmetries, conservation laws).Conserved organelle morphologies (e.g., double-membrane mitochondria), stable polarity axes, consistent lumenal pH per organelle type, conserved vesicle coat architectures, and reproducible cytoskeletal filament geometry across cells.
3.2 Causal ArchitectureMechanismsUnderlying processes or structures that produce the observed regularities.Protein sorting signals drive organelle targeting; vesicle budding/fusion produces cargo flow; motor proteins generate directed motion; cytoskeletal dynamics shape compartment positioning; membrane tension regulates fission/fusion events; scaffolding complexes maintain structural integrity.
PathwaysOrganized sequences of interactions forming a causal chain or network.Ordered sequences such as ribosome synthesis → ER import → vesicle formation → Golgi processing → targeted trafficking; mitochondrial fission/fusion cycles; autophagosome formation → lysosomal fusion → degradation; cytoskeleton-driven transport cycles.
3.3 Theoretical VocabularyConceptsCore terms that encode the domain’s structure (force, gene, equilibrium, field).Compartmentalization, membrane trafficking, organelle identity, lumenal environment, cytoskeletal dynamics, targeting signals, SNARE-mediated fusion, scaffolding, vesicle coats, curvature generators.
ClassificationsTaxonomies, categories, or typologies that organize entities and relations.Organelle categories (biosynthetic, degradative, energy-producing, regulatory); filament systems (actin, microtubules, intermediate filaments); trafficking routes (anterograde, retrograde); coat complexes (COPI, COPII, clathrin).
3.4 Formal RepresentationsEquationsMathematical constructs expressing laws, relations, or mechanisms.Kinetic equations for trafficking rates; diffusion models for membrane or protein movement; curvature-energy equations for membrane bending; polymerization kinetics for actin/microtubules; pH or ion-gradient equations across membranes.
ModelsStructured representations—mathematical, computational, or conceptual—used to predict and explain phenomena.Vesicle trafficking networks; organelle biogenesis models; cytoskeletal transport simulations; membrane curvature models; dynamic organelle population models; EM/fluorescence-based structural reconstructions.
3.5 Idealized StructuresSimplified ModelsPurposeful abstractions that capture essential dynamics while omitting irrelevant detail.Treating organelles as uniform compartments; modeling vesicles as perfect spheres; representing cytoskeletal filaments as ideal polymers; reducing trafficking networks to graph-like pathways; approximating membranes as smooth continuous surfaces.
Limit ConditionsRegimes where specific models or approximations hold (classical vs. quantum, linear vs. nonlinear).Approximations fail when heterogeneity dominates (rafts, subdomains), when stochastic noise is high, when pathological morphologies occur, or when spatial resolution reveals non-ideal structural complexity.
3.6 Integrative FrameworksUnifying TheoriesHigher-order structures that connect disparate laws or mechanisms under a coherent whole.Organelle identity as an emergent property of protein/lipid composition + trafficking flows; cellular compartmentalization as a structural/energetic optimization system; cytoskeleton–membrane cooperation frameworks for intracellular organization.
Interdisciplinary LinksPoints where the theory connects to adjacent sciences or larger explanatory systems.Links to biophysics (polymer dynamics, membrane mechanics), biochemistry (enzyme localization), genetics (organelle inheritance), physiology (energy production, degradation pathways), and systems biology (network modeling).
4. Method Layer4.1 Inquiry DesignExperimental DesignStructured plans for manipulating variables to test causal claims.Manipulating protein targeting signals, altering cytoskeletal components, modifying membrane composition, inhibiting trafficking steps, controlling pH/ion levels, and inducing fusion/fission events to determine causal effects on organelle structure and function.
Observational DesignSystematic approaches for gathering non-manipulated data (surveys, field studies, natural experiments).Live-cell imaging of unmanipulated organelle dynamics, natural variations in morphology, endogenous trafficking patterns, spontaneous cytoskeletal remodeling, and native responses to environmental conditions.
4.2 Testing & ValidationHypothesis TestingProcedures for evaluating whether evidence supports or contradicts specific claims.Comparing predicted vs. actual changes in organelle morphology, tracking shifts in localization after perturbations, validating proposed mechanisms of trafficking or fusion, and testing expected outcomes of protein targeting models.
ReplicationThe requirement that results be independently reproducible under similar conditions.Repeating imaging protocols, structural measurements, labeling methods, and perturbation experiments across multiple cells, cell lines, timepoints, and instruments to ensure reproducibility.
4.3 Inference & EvaluationStatistical InferenceRules for drawing conclusions from noisy or incomplete data.Analyzing variability in organelle size, dynamics, or trafficking rates; quantifying confidence in morphometric differences; determining significance of localization shifts; interpreting noisy time-lapse data.
Model ComparisonCriteria (fit, simplicity, predictive accuracy, robustness) used to evaluate competing models.Evaluating whether simplified compartment models, kinetic trafficking models, membrane curvature models, or cytoskeletal transport models best fit observed cell-level behaviors.
4.4 Error ManagementError AnalysisIdentification and quantification of random and systematic errors.Identifying and quantifying noise from photobleaching, drift, labeling heterogeneity, segmentation inaccuracies, fluctuating expression levels, or optical distortions; separating systematic from random error.
Bias ControlMethods for minimizing subjective, instrumental, or procedural biases.Reducing confounds by standardizing expression levels, controlling illumination, minimizing phototoxicity, using blinded analysis, correcting for drift, and validating probe specificity.
4.5 Adjudication & RevisionPeer ScrutinyCollective evaluation of claims through critique, review, and debate.Microscopy protocols, image processing workflows, structural interpretations, and mechanistic claims are evaluated through lab group review, publication peer review, and cross-validation with independent datasets.
Theory RevisionProcedures for modifying, replacing, or discarding models based on new evidence.Updating structural or mechanistic models when observed dynamics, morphologies, or trafficking behaviors contradict existing assumptions; revising models to incorporate new imaging techniques or molecular discoveries.
4.6 Integrity ConditionsTransparencyRequirements to disclose methods, data, assumptions, and limitations.Full disclosure of imaging settings, labeling strategies, acquisition parameters, data processing steps, assumptions, limitations, and potential artifacts to ensure interpretability and reproducibility.
Ethical StandardsNorms ensuring responsible conduct in experimentation, data handling, and publication.Ensuring safe and responsible use of live-cell imaging, genetic manipulation, and chemical perturbations; accurate reporting of structural findings; avoiding data manipulation or concealed processing steps.