Transcript Cells
Cells
Why are cells small?
Surface area to volume ratio
and cell size
Cell size is limited by the surface area
to volume ratio
As an object increases in volume, so
does it’s surface area but not at the
same rate.
Biological significance
Cell volume determines amount of
activity in a given amount of time.
The surface area determines the
amount of material that can be
moved into and out of a cell
Cells must maintain a large surface
area to volume ratio to function
This explains why large animals have
many small cells rather than a few
large ones
How Cells Get Around
the SA/V Problem
Avoidance - stay small
Small size maximizes surface area to volume
Allows most efficient import/export possible.
Small cells can gather nutrients and reproduce
extremely rapidly
Examples - bacteria, yeasts
Geometric Solutions
Increase surface area
1.
Elongate or flatten out
A sphere has a low SA/V ratio. Cells that are
drawn out (e.g. cylinder), or flattened have
much more membrane per unit of cytoplasm.
Examples - Eubacteria, red blood cells
2.
Fold the surface membrane
Extending the outer surface of a cell into folds,
fingers or indentations increases the total
surface area by a factor of several times
Examples – amoeba, intestinal cells (microvilli)
Decrease effective volume
Hollow out centre of cell
A cell with a large water-filled vacuole in the
center has much less active cytoplasm than its
measurements would suggest. Its metabolic
demands are therefore not as great.
Example - Mature plant cells
Increasing rate of supply
1.
Seek out areas where nutrient
concentration is high
Mobile cells can avoid areas with
sparse nutrients and actively seek
areas where nutrient concentration is
high
2. Actively acquire bulk nutrients
By taking in food in vacuoles, cells
increase their total imports and
provide themselves with small,
extremely rich bubbles of nutrients.
Examples – amoeba, paramecium,
intestinal villi
3. Improve transportation of nutrients
within cell
By moving nutrients rapidly away
from the membrane, concentrations
gradients across the membrane can
be maintained.
Improving efficiency to
reduce demand
1. Division of labour within cell
The complex organelles of
Eukaryotic cells allow them to have
specialized areas in the cytoplasm
to. The cell is much more efficient.
2 Division of labour between cells
Form tissues – by joining together cells can
form an organism that can have a large size.
Each cell can specialize and maintain mutual
dependent relationship with the other cells of
the organism (homeostasis)
Example - Plants, animals, fungi, some algae