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A Tour of the Cell Chapter 7
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Important People in Cell History
Notes Outline Important People in Cell History The Cell Theory Major Types of Cells How We Study Cells
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Important People in Cell History
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Galileo (1620’s) Given credit as the first person to create a microscope (from a modified telescope)
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Robert Hooke (1665) Observed cork cells (cork is dead plant matter)
Named the CELL he said the cell looked like the “cells” in a monestary
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Antony von Leeuwenhoek (1600’s)
Observed microscopic organisms with the first true light microscope Observed the first bacterial cell (not seen again for over 200 years) Observed red blood cells
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What Leeuwenhoek saw Spiral Bacteria Red Blood Cells
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Robert Brown (1833) Botanist
Observed that plant cells have a dark structure that stains in the middle Named the structure he saw the NUCLEUS
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Matthias Schleiden (1838) Botanist
Noticed that ALL plant tissues are composed of cells
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Theodore Schwann (1839) Zoologist
Noticed that all animal tissues were composed of cells
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Francesco Redi (1700’s) Disproved SPONTANEOUS GENERATION (theory that all living things come from non-living matter) Used meat & maggots in his experiment
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Redi’s Experiment
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Rudolf Virchow (1858) Proposed that ALL cells come from pre-existing cells Refuted spontaneous generation Proposed BIOGENESIS (living things come from other living things)
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Louis Pasteur (1862) Further disproved spontaneous generation using meat broth experiment Boiling a substance will kill any living matter (PASTEURIZATION) Chicken Broth Experiment
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Pasteur’s Experiment
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The Cell Theory Notes Outline Important People in Cell History
Major Types of Cells How We Study Cells
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THE CELL THEORY All living things are made of cells (Schwann & Schleiden). All cells arise from pre-existing cells (Virchow, Redi, Pasteur). Cells are the basic unit of structure and function of living things (Schwann & Schleiden).
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Major Types of Cells Notes Outline Important People in Cell History
The Cell Theory Major Types of Cells How We Study Cells
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Major Types of Cells Prokaryotes Eukaryotes
No membrane-bound organelles (no nucleus) Have DNA in nucleoid (floating in cytosol) Unicellular Bacteria (eubacteria and archaebacteria) Pro = before Karyon = nucleus Eukaryotes Have membrane-bound organelles Have DNA in nucleus Unicellular and multicellular Protista, fungi, plantae, and animalia Eu = true
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Key components to ALL cells
Cell (plasma) membrane Cytosol (fluid inside membrane)/cytoplasm Chromosomes (DNA) Ribosomes (make proteins from DNA instructions)
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How We Study Cells Notes Outline Important People in Cell History
The Cell Theory Major Types of Cells How We Study Cells
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How We Study Cells Light Microscope (LM) uses a light source to reflect or refract a magnified image Resolution clarity of image Magnification amount image size is increased
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Diatoms Onion Root Tip
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How We Study Cells Electron Microscope (1950s) focuses a beam of electrons through a specimen Allows us to see organelles within a cell Has a resolution about 200 X greater than LM
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Mitochondria
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How We Study Cells Transmission Electron Microscope (TEM) beam of electrons is passed through a thin section of a specimen Electromagnets (acting as lenses) focus and magnify image Stain specimen with heavy metals to see details
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Cross section thru nerve cell – can see the layers of the myelin sheath surrounding axon
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How We Study Cells Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) electron beam scans the surface of a specimen coated with thin gold film Electrons are excited as they bounce off surface and project an image onto a screen Images are captured on film (like Polaroids) Images appear to be 3D
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Bacteria invading fungus
Nerve ending Pollen Various human Blood cells Bacteria invading fungus Snow
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