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Download Cell Specialisation - NCEA Level 2 Biology
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Starter Quiz: 1. What are the beating hairs for movement of a unicellular organism called? 2. What organism uses these? 3. These structures also help with feeding by moving food into a specialised area, what is this called? 4. Amoeba use extensions of the flexible cell membrane to move, what do we call this? 5. Which unicellular organisms can photosynthesise? Starter Quiz: 1. What are the beating hairs for movement of a unicellular organism called? Cilia 2. What organism uses these? Paramecium 3. These structures also help with feeding by moving food into a specialised area, what is this called? Cilia 4. Amoeba use extensions of the flexible cell membrane to move, what do we call this? Pseudopods 5. Which unicellular organisms can photosynthesise? Euglena 4. Specialised Cells Explain why cells which are specialised contain different organelles. Cell Specialisation There are hundreds of different types of plant and animal cells. Each focus on a certain “job” in the organism in which they are found. It is said that they are specialised, or differentiated, for that function. https://www.youtube.com/watc h?v=UgT5rUQ9EmQ When a sperm and egg are fertilised… • The cells are unspecialised (identical) • After several cell division cycles have occurred, they start to differentiate. • This occurs as some genes are turned on in some cells only which cause certain proteins to be made which give the cell a particular shape or number of organelles. Similarities and differences in Size of Cells. Size: All cells are microscopic. When a cell gets too big it divides, so its SA to volume ratio goes up. Plant cells are larger than animal cells. They have a vacuole so cytoplasm pushed closer to membrane for diffusion of gases and nutrients Similarities and differences with Shape Shape: Shape relates to function e.g. nerve cells long and thin to carry impulses Cells that are specialised for diffusion tend to be long and thin to decrease the distance to travel across a cell and to increase surface area (root hair cell, villi cells in intestine) Plant cells tend to be more regular in shape as the rigid cell wall dictates shape. Similarities and differences in Organelles Number of a certain organelle can be an indicator of the function of a cell Many ribosomes and rough ER- high rate of protein synthesis, also have prominent nucleoli. Smooth ER – make lipids, metabolises CHO, detoxifies other drugs, make steroids eg sex hormones so gonads rich in smooth ER. Liver also. Golgi Bodies - Cells specialised for secretions Many mitochondria - Cells with high energy requirement – (liver and muscles) Many chloroplasts – high photosynthesis rate. Red Blood Cells • Contain haemoglobin which transports oxygen to other cells and around the body • Biconcave shape for maximum surface area to allow more oxygen to be absorbed efficiently. • Biconcave shape also allows for a flexible framework which means cells can squeeze through the thinnest of capillaries. • Cells have a thin outer membrane allowing oxygen to diffuse through easily. • Have no nucleus so there is more room for oxygen to be carried in the cell and hence around the body. Sperm cell • The tail (flagella) of the sperm cell enables it to swim to the ovum and fertilise it. • The head is streamlined also to aid swimming • The head contains genetic information and a nucleus and has an enzyme to help penetrate the egg cell membrane to allow fertilisation. • The middle section immediately behind the head is packed with mitochondria to provide energy. Nerve cell • Transmit electrical nerve impulses and so carry information from one part of the body to another ie from receptor to an effector. • Dendrites extend from the cell body to make connections with other neurones. • Have a long axon (nerve fibre) to carry the impulse to the target organ. • End plate forms a synapse with an effector (a muscle or a gland). Muscle cells • Long thin cells • Have many mitochondria due to energy requirements Plant cell - Xylem • Long and tube-like hollow vessels to carry the water from roots to leaves. • Cells have no end walls between them so they form a 'pipeline' to carry the water. • Spirals and rings of lignin in the cell walls strengthen them to withstand pressure of water. Plant cell – root hair • Located in the root epidermis and in direct contact with the soil • Thin walls make up-take of water easier. • Wall nearest the soil has a long 'finger-like' projection with very thin walls into the soil. This projection increases the surface area for more efficient absorption of water and ions. • no chloroplasts as no photosynthesis occurs (no light); No mitochondria - active transport Plant cell – palisade cell • Typical plant cell • Packed with chloroplasts which contain the light absorbing pigment chlorophyll. • Regular shaped closely packed cells forming a continuous layer for efficient and maximum absorption of sunlight Cell sort – group activity • In groups of 4 match up the cell names with the cell pictures with clues underneath. Make sure everyone in your group agrees. There are 12 animal cells and 12 plant cells. • You have 5 minutes then we will mark as a class. Compare the following cells In terms of cell function explain why these cells have different shape and organelles: – Root hair cell and plant palisade cell – Muscle cell and nerve cell