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Cells – the building blocks of life. What is a cell? Basic unit of all living things Fully alive Capable of reproduction and respiration* Many chemical.

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Presentation on theme: "Cells – the building blocks of life. What is a cell? Basic unit of all living things Fully alive Capable of reproduction and respiration* Many chemical."— Presentation transcript:

1 Cells – the building blocks of life

2 What is a cell? Basic unit of all living things Fully alive Capable of reproduction and respiration* Many chemical reactions take place within the cell Contains the elements carbon, hydrogen and oxygen

3 Trivia: How did the cell get its name? Robert Hooke 1665 – used the 1 st microscope ever invented to look at a thin piece of cork Box-like cells reminded him of the cells of a monastery What he actually saw were the cell walls in cork tissue Cells from cork tissue of tree bark

4 Visualising Cells Cells are very small Largest cell in the human body – human egg 0.1 mm

5 Unicellular organisms Uni – “one” Living things that are only made up of one cell paramecium amoebabacteria yeast

6 Multicellular organisms Multi – “many” Plants Animals Human adult – 10 trillion cells! – Are all the cells the same? – Different sizes, shapes, functions – Certain similar characteristics

7 Typical animal cell ** Nucleus Cell membrane Cytoplasm Vacuoles Is it THAT simple?

8 Structure of an Animal Cell

9 Animal cell

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11 Typical animal cell ** Nucleus Cell membrane Cytoplasm Vacuoles Nucleus – Controls all chemical reactions and activities in the cell, including reproduction and cell repair – Contains chromosomes

12 Sidetrack: Chromosomes http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eOvMNOMRRm8 each chromosome is made up of many genes; each gene contains instructions for a different feature of an organism genes on a chromosome nucleus chromosomes

13 Sidetrack: Chromosomes Found in the nucleus Made of DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) and proteins Contains genes – chemical instructions to build the cell and control its functions Genes are passed down from 1 generation to another - hereditary

14 Human cells have 23 pairs of chromosomes except the sperm and the egg (23 individual chromosomes) Sex chromosomes

15 Genetic Diseases Down’s Syndrome – Extra chromosome in each cell in his/her body – 47 chromosomes instead of 46 chromosomes – Result of unusual cell division when egg/sperm was made, or during fertilisation – Happens by chance, can happen to anyone

16 Typical animal cell ** Nucleus Cell membrane Cytoplasm Vacuoles Cell membrane – Thin layer around the cell – Allows shape of cell to change – Partially permeable, controls movement of materials in and out of the cell – Carbon dioxide, oxygen, water can pass through

17 Typical animal cell ** Nucleus Cell membrane Cytoplasm Vacuoles Cytoplasm – jelly-like substance that fills the cell – contains water and many other substances – chemical reactions take place here

18 Typical animal cell ** Nucleus Cell membrane Cytoplasm Vacuoles – small spaces in the cytoplasm containing water, food, waste materials etc – small and numerous in animal cells

19 Nucleus Cell membrane Vacuole Cytoplasm Cellulose cell wall Chloroplasts Typical plant cell ** Functions similar to that of an Animal Cell

20 Plant cell

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23 Vacuole Cytoplasm Typical plant cell ** Vacuole −Single large vacuole −Biggest part of the cell −Filled with cell sap (contains substances such as sugars and salts dissolved in water) −Cell sap keeps the cell firm by taking in water

24 Vacuole Cytoplasm Typical plant cell ** Vacuole −When the plant loses water, plasmolysis occurs

25 Click here to find out more

26 Vacuole Cytoplasm Typical plant cell ** Cytoplasm −Reduced to a thin lining −Still contains water and other substances, still a place for chemical reactions

27 Chloroplasts – Tiny disc-like structures containing a green pigment called chlorophyll – Chlorophyll traps light energy from the sun so that plants can make food during photosynthesis – Absent in animal cells Cellulose cell wall Chloroplasts Typical plant cell **

28 Cellulose cell wall – Surrounds the plant cell – Supports the plant cell and gives it a regular shape – Absent in animal cells Cellulose cell wall Chloroplasts Typical plant cell **

29 Sidetrack: Cellulose Compound containing carbon, hydrogen and oxygen A type of fibre – Dietary fibre present in fruits and vegetables – Manufacture of cardboard and papers (from wood pulp)

30 Animal Cell Plant Cell Does it have a cellulose cell wall? NoYes Does it have a cell membrane? Yes Does it have a nucleus? Yes Does it have cytoplasm? Yes – it fills the cellYes – a thin lining only Does it have vacuoles? Yes – many, but small Yes – one, or a few, and large Does it have chloroplasts? No Present only in cells of green plants Shape?Can changeRegular (doesn’t change)


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