cells - District 196
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Transcript cells - District 196
CHAPTER 6 - CELLS
Section 6.1 & 6.2
Importance of cells
An organism’s basic unit of structure & function is the
cell
Everything we do occurs fundamentally at the
cellular level
Thinking
Moving
Maintaining
homeostasis
Cells discovered by Robert Hooke in 1665
Studying Cells
How do we understand cells if we can’t see them?
Microscopes allow us to see the inner workings of
cells
Two main types of Microscopes
Light
Microscope (LM) – 1665-present
Electron Microscope (EM) – 1950’s-present
Light Microscopes
Allow us to see plant & animal cells and the nucleus.
Can also see bacteria cells.
Light passes through the specimen and lenses, bends
the light to magnify the image.
Magnification: ratio of an object’s image to its real
size (max. about 1,000x)
Resolution: measure of the clarity of the image
(max. about 200nm – size of bacteria)
Electron Microscopes
Rapidly advance our understanding of cells
because we could see subcellular structures
Focuses a beam of electrons through the specimen
Two types:
Scanning
Gives
electron microscope (SEM)
a 3D image of the surface of the specimen
Transmission
Used
electron microscope (TEM)
to study internal stux – gives a cross section
Advantages & Disadvantages
Light Microscopes
Advantage:
Can study living organisms
Disadvantage: Can’t see organelles in detail
Electron Microscopes
Advantage:
Can see organelles in detail
Disadvantage: Specimens are killed in preparation
process (not for living tissues)
Cell Fractionation
Goal: take cells apart and separate the major
organelles from one another
Process:
Centrifuge
spins test tubes at various speeds
Cell components separate by size and density
Result:
Bulk
quantity of cellular organelles to study composition
and function
Section 6.2
Two types of cells
Prokaryotic
found in Domain _______ & _______
Eukaryotic found in Domain _______
What 4 Kingdoms contain organisms with Eukaryotic
cells?
1.
Animal
2. Plant
3. Protist
4. Fungi
Similarities & Differences
All Cells contain:
Plasma
membrane made up of a __________
Phospholipid
Cytosol
bilayer
(cytoplasm)
DNA
Ribosomes
Differences:
Eukaryotic
cells contain membrane bound organelles
and the DNA is contained in the nucleus.
Prokaryotic cells:
DNA located in nucleoid region
Prefix: pro means “before”
Suffix: karyon means “kernel” (nucleus)
No membrane bound organelles in cytoplasm
Smaller & simpler
Cilia and flagella for locomotion
Some have cell wall surrounding plasma membrane
Prokaryotic cells
Cell Size
Cellular metabolism sets a limit on how large a cell
can get
The cell needs to bring in oxygen & nutrients and
needs to get rid of waste
Cell needs to maintain a high surface area to
volume ratio to exchange the materials it needs to
Larger organisms do not have larger cells just more
of them (we have trillions of cells!)
Surface area to volume ratio
Plasma membrane
Eukaryotic cells
Contain membrane bound organelles
Larger than prokaryotic cells and more complex
Animal & Plant cells
Draw a diagram of an animal and a plant cell