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A history of the cell • 1607 English settlers found colony at Jamestown Virginia • 1665 Robert Hooke, looked at cork and discovered and named cells • 1674 Anton van Leeuwenhoek - observed tiny living things in drops of pond water. • 1838 Matthias Schleiden - concluded that plants are made of cells • 1839 Theodor Schwann - concluded that animals are made of cells. • 1855 Rudolph Virchow - proposes that cells come from existing cells • 1931 Janet Plowe - demonstrates that the cell membrane in a physical structure not just an interface between two liquids. • 1945 World War II ends • 1970 Lynn Margulis - proposes the theory that certain organelles, were once free-living cells themselves The Cell Theory • All living things are composed of cells. • Cells are the basic units of structure and function in living things. • New cells are produced from existing cells. Two Cell Types • Prokaryotic Cells - 1 to 10 um – have cell membrane and cytoplasm but no nuclei – smaller and simpler than eukaryotic cells – bacteria • Eukaryotic Cells - 10 to 100 um – do contain nuclei and other specialized organelles – all plants, animals, fungus and protists Cell membrane Cytoplasm Prokaryotic Cell Cell membrane Cytoplasm Nucleus Eukaryotic Cell Organelles Go to Section: Venn Diagrams Section 7-2 Prokaryotes Eukaryotes Cell membrane Ribosomes Cell wall Animal Cells Lysosomes Go to Section: Plant Cells Cell membrane Ribosomes Nucleus Endoplasmic reticulum Golgi apparatus Vacuoles Mitochondria Cytoskeleton Cell Wall Chloroplasts Nucleus Endoplasmic reticulum Golgi apparatus Lysosomes Vacuoles Mitochondria Cytoskeleton Cell Structures • • • • • • • • Cell Wall Cell Membrane Nucleus Cytoplasm endoplasmic Reticulum Ribosomes Golgi Bodies Lysosomes • Mitochondria • microtubules / microfilaments • Centrioles • Cilia and Flagella • Vacuoles • Plastids Cell Membrane • All Cells have them • Controls passage of material into and out of the cell • double-layered, semi-permeable membrane • composed of lipids and embedded protein molecules The Structure of the Cell Membrane Outside of cell Proteins Carbohydrate chains Cell membrane Inside of cell (cytoplasm) Go to Section: Protein channel Lipid bilayer AIR Hydrophobic tail Hydrophilic head (a) WATER (b) WATER WATER Cell Wall • Found in – Plants, algae, fungi and nearly all prokaryotes • • • • Lies outside the cell membrane provide support and protection for the cell most commonly made of cellulose Made of actin in bacteria Cytoplasm • • • • Fluid-like material Between cell membrane and nucleus Contains organelles many biochemical processes occur here Ribosomes • Found in prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells • Sites of protein synthesis • free in cytoplasm or attached to endoplasmic reticulum Endoplasmic Reticulum • Membrane-lined, interconnecting channels through the cytoplasm • associated with – synthesis – storage – transport of material Endoplasmic Reticulum Mitochondria • Found in all eukaryotic cells. (animal, plant, fungi, protist) • Specialized double membrane structure • Sites of most energy-producing reactions of aerobic cellular respiration. • The “powerhouse” of the cell. • Has its own DNA Chloroplasts • • • • • Found in plants and some algae Specialized double membrane structure Contain the green pigment chlorophyll Sites of photosynthesis Has some DNA Golgi Bodies (Complex) • Stack of membrane-bounded channels and vacuoles • Synthesizes, packages and secretes cell products Lysosomes • Membrane-bounded sacs that contain digestive enzymes • digest food in single celled organisms • Destroy damaged or old cell parts • Programmed cell death - apoptosis Vacuoles • Small or none in animal cells • Large in plant cells • Membrane-bounded , fluid filled sacs in the cytoplasm • food vacuole • waste vacuole • contractile vacuole Centrioles • Only in animal cells • involved in cell division Figure 7-5 Plant and Animal Cells Smooth endoplasmic reticulum Vacuole Ribosome (free) Chloroplast Ribosome (attached) Cell Membrane Nuclear envelope Cell wall Nucleolus Golgi apparatus Nucleus Mitochondrian Rough endoplasmic reticulum Plant Cell Go to Section: Figure 7-5 Plant and Animal Cells Nucleolus Nucleus Ribosome (attached) Nuclear envelope Mitochondrian Smooth endoplasmic reticulum Rough endoplasmic reticulum Centrioles Golgi apparatus Animal Cell Go to Section: Ribosome (free) Cell Membrane What type of cell is this? Plant Cell cell membrane nucleus mitochondria cell wall Cell wall Chloroplasts Nucleus Vacuole vacuole endoplasmic reticulum mitochondria cell membrane Column B Column A 3 6 Cell Membrane Cytoplasm 1. Structure that directs the activities of the cell. Contains the hereditary material – the DNA in the chromosomes. Surrounded by the nuclear membrane. 2. Sites of most energy producing reactions of aerobic cellular respiration. The “power house” of the cell. Surrounds the cell and controls the passage of materials into and out of the cell. Double-layered, semi-permeable membrane composed of lipids and containing embedded protein molecules 1 Nucleus 3. 8 Ribosomes 4. Chlorophyll-containing structures found in cells of green plants and some algae. Sites of photosynthesis. 7 Endoplasmic Reticulum 5. Nonliving rigid supportive structure found outside the cell membrane in plants, algae, fungi and various other organisms. Most commonly composed of cellulose. 2 4 5 Mitochondria Chloroplasts Cell Wall 6. Watery fluid-like material that fills the space between the plasma membrane and the nucleus of the cell. Contains the organelles. Many biochemical processes occur here. 7. A series of membrane-lined, interconnecting channels through the cytoplasm. Transports things throughout the cell. The “highway system” of the cell 8. Sites of protein synthesis. May be free in the cytoplasm or attached to the membranes of the endoplasmic reticulum