1 / 61

Cells were discovered and studied by using microscopes

Cells were discovered and studied by using microscopes cell theory = all living cells are formed by division of existing cells and inherit their characteristics from them cell theory is the basis of all biology our understanding of how cells behave gives us clues to the past - evolution.

gmeserve
Download Presentation

Cells were discovered and studied by using microscopes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Cells were discovered and studied by using microscopes • cell theory = all living cells are formed by division of existing cells and inherit their characteristics from them • cell theory is the basis of all biology • our understanding of how cells behave gives us clues to the past - evolution

  2. Plant root tip Kidney ducts Tissue = cells surrounded by extracellular matrix

  3. 1M=1000mm=1,000,000μm (micron) .2μm=200nm

  4. Brightfield Phase contrast Differtial-interference

  5. A living cell seen under a light microscope

  6. .2nm=2Å

  7. Yeast eucaryote by light microscope Eucaryotes have intracellular membrane organalles like nuclei Procaryotes do not = bacteria (eubacteria and archaebacteria)

  8. Nuclius -DNA as chromatin

  9. Chromosomes in a cell about to divide - DNA condensed

  10. Mitochondria by light microscope

  11. Mitochondria by electron microscope

  12. Theory of the origin of mitochondria

  13. Chloroplasts - photosynthesis Leaf cells by light microscopy Electron micrograph of a chloroplast

  14. Theory of the origin of chloroplasts

  15. Endoplasmic reticulum

  16. golgi

  17. endocytosis exocytosis

  18. Cytoskeleton - A.actin filaments (thinnest - rapid,muscles), B microtubules (thickest - hollow tubes - spindle/ mitosis, movement of organelles), C intermediate filaments (mechanical stability) Gives cells mechanical strength, controls shape, drives and guides intracellular and cell movements

  19. Microtubules (spindle) in a dividing cell

  20. Cells vary enormously in appearance and function

  21. Protozoan Paramecium neuron Plant stem bacterium dendrite flagella Cell body axon cilia The larger a cell is the more surface area is required for all the transactions needed - taking in nutrients, getting rid of wastes. Intracellular membranes add to the surface area and allow the volume or size of the cell to be greater. Therefore eucaryotic cells are larger than procaryotic cells

  22. Neutrophil (white blood cell) engulfing a red blood cell Cells are enormously diverse chemically also. Some need oxygen, for some oxygen is poison. Some make hormones, some are “engines” like muscles. But all living cells have a similar basic chemistry.

  23. All living cells are similar • grow, reproduce, convert energy from one form into another, etc. • chemistry - DNA stores genetic instructions using the same chemical code (nucleotides), this code is duplicated, transcribed and translated in the same way in all cells. • DNA codes for the construction of protein molecules which in large part determine the behavior of the cell • The same 20 different amino acids are the building blocks for proteins in all cells.

  24. DNA duplicates before a cell reproduces (divides). • Daughter cells receive a set of the DNA and therefore resemble parent. But not exactly. • Mutations (changes in the DNA) can lead to a change that is bad - less able to survive and reproduce, a change that is neutral - makes no difference in survival, or a change that is for the better - better able to survive - evolution. • In general, the struggle for survival (food etc) eliminates the bad, favors the good, and tolerates the neutral changes -natural selection. • Sexual reproduction also leads to different combinations of genetic material - evolution.

  25. Evolution = changes in the DNA (evolving) and selection of the organisms that are better able to survive over thousands of millions of cell generations. • Present day cells may be fundamentally similar because they all inherited their genetic instructions from a common ancestor. • Cells are ultimately made of inorganic chemicals, oxygen, carbon, etc. So cells obey the laws of physics - thermodynamics and chemistry. Cannot create energy etc. • The larger a cell is the more surface area is required for all the transactions needed - taking in nutrients, getting rid of wastes. Intracellular membranes add to the surface area and allow the volume or size of the cell to be greater. Therefore eucaryotic cells are larger than procaryotic cells

  26. Bacteria are small, diverse, and reproduce quickly, so they evolve quickly. They outnumber other organisms. Their chemistry is very diverse, virtually any organic material can be used for food. Two kingdoms - eubacteria and archaebacteria. Archaebacteria are unique - found in hostile environments. Biologists have chosen a small number of organisms as a focus for intense investigations. Because of the underlying similarity in all cells, we have learned much about our own cells from the bacteria Escherichia coli

  27. Some bacteria are photosynthetic. Bacteria not only use organic material, they can also live on inorganic substances, getting CO2, nitrogen, hydrogen, sulfur, etc from the air. Even plants can not capture nitrogen from the atmosphere.

  28. Escherichia coli (electron micrograph) have been studied extensively. Lives in the guts of humans and other vertebrates and grown easily in broth culture. Contains a single molecule of DNA which codes for about 4000 proteins

  29. Evolutionary scientists think that giardia may be an intermediate stage in evolution. Has 2 nuclei but no other intracellular organelles. Analysis of it’s DNA demonstrates a close relationship to bacteria and eucaryotes.

  30. Brewer’s yeast has been studied extensively as a minimal eucaryote model. It is small, single-celled fungus with a rigid cell wall. Has about 2.5 times the DNA of E coli

More Related