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Class Notes Cells

Cells are the fundamental units of life, with all living organisms composed of one or more cells that perform essential functions. The cell theory states that all living things are made of cells, cells are the basic unit of structure and function, and new cells arise from pre-existing cells. There are two main types of cells: prokaryotic (simple, no nucleus) and eukaryotic (complex, with nucleus and organelles), each with specialized structures and functions.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
18 views6 pages

Class Notes Cells

Cells are the fundamental units of life, with all living organisms composed of one or more cells that perform essential functions. The cell theory states that all living things are made of cells, cells are the basic unit of structure and function, and new cells arise from pre-existing cells. There are two main types of cells: prokaryotic (simple, no nucleus) and eukaryotic (complex, with nucleus and organelles), each with specialized structures and functions.

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Class Notes: Cells

1. Introduction to Cells
●​ Cells are the basic unit of life.​

●​ All living things are made of one or more cells.​

●​ Cells carry out all necessary functions for life (growth, energy use, reproduction,
response to environment).​

●​ Study of cells = cell biology / cytology.​

2. Cell Theory
●​ Three main points of cell theory:​

○​ All living things are made of cells.​

○​ Cells are the basic unit of structure and function in living things.​

○​ New cells come from pre-existing cells.​

●​ Developed by scientists:​

○​ Robert Hooke (1665): First to observe "cells" in cork.​

○​ Anton van Leeuwenhoek: Improved microscopes, saw living cells (bacteria,


protists).​

○​ Matthias Schleiden & Theodor Schwann (1830s): Stated plants and animals
are made of cells.​

○​ Rudolf Virchow (1855): All cells come from other cells.​


3. Types of Cells
A. Prokaryotic Cells

●​ Simple, small cells with no nucleus.​

●​ DNA floats freely in cytoplasm (in nucleoid region).​

●​ No membrane-bound organelles.​

●​ Examples: bacteria, archaea.​

●​ Key structures:​

○​ Cell wall (most bacteria)​

○​ Cell membrane​

○​ Cytoplasm​

○​ Ribosomes (make proteins)​

○​ Flagella / pili (movement & attachment)​

B. Eukaryotic Cells

●​ Larger, more complex cells with a nucleus.​

●​ Have membrane-bound organelles.​

●​ Can be unicellular or multicellular.​

●​ Examples: plants, animals, fungi, protists.​

●​ Key structures: nucleus, mitochondria, ER, Golgi, etc.​

4. Cell Structures & Organelles


A. Common to All Cells
●​ Cell membrane (plasma membrane):​

○​ Surrounds the cell, controls movement of substances in & out.​

○​ Made of phospholipid bilayer with proteins.​

●​ Cytoplasm: Jelly-like fluid that holds organelles.​

●​ Ribosomes: Tiny organelles that make proteins.​

B. Organelles in Eukaryotic Cells

●​ Nucleus:​

○​ Control center of cell.​

○​ Contains DNA (chromosomes).​

○​ Surrounded by nuclear envelope with pores.​

●​ Mitochondria:​

○​ "Powerhouse" of the cell.​

○​ Converts glucose into ATP (energy).​

○​ Site of cellular respiration.​

●​ Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER):​

○​ Rough ER: Has ribosomes, makes proteins.​

○​ Smooth ER: Makes lipids, detoxifies.​

●​ Golgi Apparatus (Golgi Body):​

○​ Packages, modifies, and ships proteins/lipids.​

●​ Lysosomes:​

○​ Contain digestive enzymes.​


○​ Break down waste, old cell parts.​

●​ Cytoskeleton:​

○​ Network of fibers for structure & movement.​

C. Plant Cell Special Structures

●​ Cell Wall: Rigid layer (cellulose) for support & protection.​

●​ Chloroplasts: Contain chlorophyll, site of photosynthesis.​

●​ Large Central Vacuole: Stores water, nutrients; helps maintain shape.​

5. Cell Specialization
●​ In multicellular organisms, cells can differentiate into specialized types.​

●​ Examples:​

○​ Red blood cells: Carry oxygen.​

○​ Nerve cells: Transmit signals.​

○​ Muscle cells: Contract for movement.​

○​ Plant root cells: Absorb water/minerals.​

6. Transport Across Cell Membrane


A. Passive Transport (no energy)

●​ Diffusion: Movement of molecules from high → low concentration.​

●​ Osmosis: Diffusion of water across a membrane.​


●​ Facilitated diffusion: Uses transport proteins, still no energy.​

B. Active Transport (requires energy/ATP)

●​ Moves molecules from low → high concentration.​

●​ Example: Sodium-potassium pump.​

C. Bulk Transport

●​ Endocytosis: Cell takes in material (engulfing).​

●​ Exocytosis: Cell pushes material out.​

7. Cell Energy
●​ Cellular Respiration (mitochondria):​
Glucose + Oxygen → Carbon Dioxide + Water + ATP​

●​ Photosynthesis (chloroplasts in plants):​


Carbon Dioxide + Water + Sunlight → Glucose + Oxygen​

8. Cell Division
A. Mitosis (body cells)

●​ One cell → two identical daughter cells.​

●​ Steps: Prophase, Metaphase, Anaphase, Telophase (PMAT).​

●​ Used for growth & repair.​

B. Meiosis (sex cells)


●​ Produces gametes (sperm/egg).​

●​ One cell → four unique haploid cells.​

●​ Creates genetic variation.​

9. Summary / Key Takeaways


●​ Cells are the foundation of all living organisms.​

●​ Prokaryotic = simple, no nucleus.​

●​ Eukaryotic = complex, nucleus + organelles.​

●​ Organelles each have specialized jobs.​

●​ Cell membranes regulate transport.​

●​ Energy is made in mitochondria (respiration) or chloroplasts (photosynthesis).​

●​ Cells divide by mitosis (growth/repair) or meiosis (reproduction).

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