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Cells have evolved two different architectures: Prokaryote “style”: ancient, simple Eukaryote “style”: modern, complex.

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Presentation on theme: "Cells have evolved two different architectures: Prokaryote “style”: ancient, simple Eukaryote “style”: modern, complex."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Cells have evolved two different architectures: Prokaryote “style”: ancient, simple Eukaryote “style”: modern, complex

3 Prokaryote cells are smaller and simpler Commonly known as bacteria Single-celled(unicellular) or Filamentous (strings of single cells)

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6 These are prokaryote E. coli bacteria on the head of a steel pin.

7 Prokaryote lifestyle unicellular: all alone Have cell wall colony: forms a film DNA is circular No nucleus or membrane bound oganelles

8 Prokaryote Feeding Photosynthetic: energy from sunlight Disease-causing: feed on living things Decomposers: feed on dead things

9 How do prokaryotes move? Flagella: whip-like projections -Rotate in a circular motion -Made up of protein “flagellin”

10 Eukaryotes are bigger and more complicated Have a nucleus Have organelles DNA is organized in chromosomes in nucleus can be multicellular include animal (no cell wall) and plant cells (cell wall)

11 Organelles are membrane-bound cell parts Mini “organs” that have unique structures and functions

12 How do eukaryotic cells move? Some can crawl with pseudopods Some can swim with a flagellum Some can swim very fast with cilia

13 Pseudopods means “fake feet” extensions of cell membrane example: ameoba

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15 Flagellum/flagella large whiplike tail pushes or pulls cell through water Made up of protein “tubulin” can be single, or a pair Moves back and forth like a whip

16 Cilia Many Many Many fine, hairlike extensions attached to cell membrane beat in unison

17 Cell membrane delicate lipid and protein skin around cytoplasm found in all cells Cell Structures

18 Nucleus a membrane-bound sac evolved to store the cell’s chromosomes(DNA ) has pores: holes

19 Nucleolus inside nucleus location of ribosome factory made or RNA

20 mitochondrion makes the cell’s energy the more energy the cell needs, the more mitochondria it has

21 Ribosomes build proteins from amino acids in cytoplasm may be free- floating, or may be attached to ER made of RNA

22 Endoplasmic reticulum may be smooth: builds lipids and carbohydrates may be rough: stores proteins made by attached ribosomes

23 Golgi Complex takes in sacs of raw material from ER sends out sacs containing finished cell products

24 Lysosomes sacs filled with digestive enzymes digest worn out cell parts digest food absorbed by cell

25 Centrioles pair of bundled tubes organize cell division

26 Cytoskeleton made of microtubules found throughout cytoplasm gives shape to cell & moves organelles around inside.

27 Structures found in plant cells Cell wall very strong made of cellulose protects cell from rupturing glued to other cells next door

28 Vacuole huge water- filled sac keeps cell pressurized stores starch

29 Chloroplasts filled with chlorophyll turn solar energy into food energy

30 How are plant and animal cells different?

31 StructureAnimal cellsPlant cells cell membraneYesyes nucleusYesyes nucleolusyes ribosomesyes ERyes Golgiyes centriolesyesno cell wallnoyes mitochondriayes cholorplastsnoyes One big vacuolenoyes cytoskeletonyesYes

32 Eukaryote cells can be multicellular The whole cell can be specialized for one job cells can work together as tissues Tissues can work together as organs

33 Advantages of each kind of cell architecture ProkaryotesEukaryotes simple and easy to growcan specialize fast reproductionmulticellularity all the samecan build large bodies

34 Examples of specialized euk. cells liver cell: specialized to detoxify blood and store glucose as glycogen.

35 sperm cell: specialized to deliver DNA to egg cell

36 Mesophyll cell specialize d to capture as much light as possible inside a leaf

37 How did organelles evolve? many scientists theorize that eukaryotes evolved from prokaryote ancestors. in 1981, Lynn Margulis popularized the “endosymbiont theory.”

38 Endosymbiont theory: a prokaryote ancestor “eats” a smaller prokaryote the smaller prokaryote evolves a way to avoid being digested, and lives inside its new “host” cell kind of like a pet.

39 Endo = inside Symbiont = friend

40 the small prokaryotes that can do photosynthesis evolve into chloroplasts, and “pay” their host with glucose. The smaller prokaryotes that can do aerobic respiration evolve into mitochondria, and convert the glucose into energy the cell can use. Both the host and the symbiont benefit from the relationship

41 Chlorella are tiny green cells that live inside some amoeba... endosymbiosis may still be evolving today!


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