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Introduction to the Cell Both living and nonliving things are made of atoms that make up molecules. The organization of these molecules into cells is one feature that separates living from nonliving. A cell is the smallest unit of matter that can carry on the processes of life. Discovery of the cell • Robert Hooke was credited with coining the term “cell” after viewing cork cells under an early microscope (1665) • The first person to observe LIVING cells was Dutch microscope maker Leeuwenhoek. (1673). Another 150 years pass…and scientists start making sense of their findings. • The Cell Theory 1. All living things are composed of one or more cells. 2. Cells are the basic units of structure and function in an organism. 3. Cells only come from the reproduction of existing cells. Cell Diversity • Not all cells are alike, even cells within the same organism show tremendous diversity. • They are specialized for their specific function. For example, a nerve cell and a muscle cell are going to look and act very differently. Size • Cells can range from 2 m ( taller than you!) to only 2 micrometers (2µm = .000002m). • The average plant and animal cells are only 50 μm (.002 inches). • Most cells are only visible with a microscope. • Cell size is limited by the surface area to volume ratio. This is important because the materials a cell needs enter through it’s surface. Shape • Just like they come in a variety or size, they also come in a variety of shapes. • The shapes tend to be well suited for their function. Ex: skin cells are flat, nerve cells branch out, and white blood cells can change shape to fit through small openings. Types of Cells • 1. Prokaryotic – “before nuclei” • 2. Eukaryotic – “true cells” Characteristics of all cells • Have DNA • Have a cell membrane—separates what is inside the cell from what is outside the cell— also controls what goes into and out of the cell • Have cytoplasm—jelly-like substance that occupies most of the cell interior • Most cells have ribosomes—small structures on which proteins are made Prokaryotes • Single celled organisms with no nucleus or other organelles • Simplest living organisms • Some varieties can live in extreme conditions (high heat, ice, no oxygen, high salt, high pressure) • Some are heterotrophs (must eat to live) • Some are autotrophs (can make their own food from sunlight or chemicals) • Include things like bacteria • Have cytoplasm with no internal compartments • DNA is a single circular strand not enclosed in a nucleus • Have a cell wall to give it shape • Many have flagella—thread-like structures that allows the cell to move in its environment Eukaryotes • Have a nucleus with a nuclear membrane that holds the cell’s DNA • Plant cells have a cell wall—animal cells do not • Have organelles—structures which are specialized for different functions • May have cilia—short hair like projections from the cell surface that can move the cell through it’s environment or substances past the cell surface • Cytoskeleton—a framework of protein fibers that gives the cell structure and shape Viruses • • • • Have RNA or DNA No cell membrane or organelles Have a capsid—protein coat Are not considered living because they are not cells • Cannot reproduce without a host cell