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Cell Theory – and the history behind it. Spontaneous Generation. From pre-historic times to about 1850, most people believed that under the right conditions, living things could spontaneously appear from non-living material.
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Spontaneous Generation • From pre-historic times to about 1850, most people believed that under the right conditions, living things could spontaneously appear from non-living material.
People throughout the Middle Ages believed that mice could be “created” spontaneously by putting grain in dark, quiet place and leaving it for a few weeks.
Francesco Redi • Born 1626 in Italy • First to challenge the idea of spontaneous generation • Did not accept the common belief that flies magically appeared from rotting meat
Redi’s Experiment • IV=cover • DV=presence of flies • Hypothesis: If a jar containing rotting meat is covered, then it will produce no flies
Redi’s Conclusions • Flies lay eggs, which grow into maggots, which metamorphose into flies • If flies can’t lay eggs, then no new flies can grow Fly eggs
Objections to Redi • Many people rejected Redi’s claim that flies do not spontaneously generate • Their reasoning: • “sealing the jar closed prevented a magical essence from entering the rotting meat and bringing it to life” • “Scientists seek only to challenge belief systems and stir things up”
History of Microscopes • Cells were unknown until the discovery of microscopes in the 1650’s • two scientists working independently built the first microscopes • Anton von Leeuwenhoek in Holland • Robert Hooke in England
Leeuwenhoek • Studied pondwater, sour milk, and semen • named moving organisms “animalcules” • scared people and caused a sensation
Leeuwenhoek’s drawings of “animalcules” set off a flurry of amateur and sometimes ridiculous claims, such as: - pondwater animalcules causing madness!
and... Human sperm cells contain tiny human beings! Today we can look back and think “crazy,” but at the time people took these ideas very seriously.
Hooke • Studied cork - a kind of tree bark • named the structures he saw “cells” because they reminded him of the small rooms monks slept in. • What questions might the scientist now be asking? https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Cork_Micrographia_Hooke.png
The discovery of cells only confused people more- If cells are alive, then where do they come from? Can these almost invisible things appear spontaneously from the air?
Lazzaro Spallanzani • 1729. Italian • Believed microbes that spoil food come from the air and can be killed by boiling • IV= air, DV=food spoilage • Hypothesis: If air is allowed to reach food, then microbes will get in and cause it to spoil
Spallanzani’s Experiment • Flask 1: boiled broth, open • Flask 2: boiled broth, sealed shut • Results • Flask 1 spoiled • Flask 2 did not spoil
Objections to Spallanzani • Sealing the flask shut blocked the entrance of a magical life force in the air from getting to the broth. • Since few people had seen these microbes, few people believed him.
Louis Pasteur • 1822. France • Supported that spontaneous generation is a myth • Invented pasteurization (sterilization by heat) • Why would this be important?
Pasteur’s Experiment • An improvement on Spallanzani’s work • Used special “swan-neck flasks” that allowed air in but kept bacteria out • IV= bacteria, DV=spoiling broth • Hypothesis; If boiled broth is kept free of bacteria, then it will not spoil even if air can reach it.
The curved neck allows air in but traps bacteria-carrying dust and dirt particles
Pasteur is the father of modern microbiology • identified yeasts as the microbes that change grape juice into wine • showed that heat can be used to sterilize foods and preserve them in sealed glass containers, and later cans.
The Cell Theory • The cell theory has three parts: • All living things contain at least one cell • Cells are the smallest structural and functional units of life • Cells can only come from pre-existing cells
The cell theory-a closer look • All living things contain at least one cell • Many scientists working after Hooke and Leeuwenhoek observed different plants and animals • Each of them noted that no matter what they observed, if it was alive it had cells.
Development of Cell Theory • 1838- German Botanist, Matthias Schleiden, concluded that all plant parts are made of cells
Development of Cell Theory 1839- German physiologist, Theodor Schwann, who was a close friend of Schleiden, stated that all animal tissues are composed of cells.
Cells are the smallest structural and functional units of life • scientists quickly realized that when cells were dissected or broken open they died • This meant that whatever “life” is, it is something that happens inside cells
Cells can only come from pre-existing cells • does not answer the question of where the first cell came from or how it came to be. • has not been disproved yet- no scientist has ever built a living cell from nonliving organic molecules
Development of Cell Theory • 1858- Rudolf Virchow, German physician, after extensive study of cellular pathology, concluded that cells must arise from preexisting cells. • But...that’s not the whole story behind this idea.
Cells come from pre-existing cells • Historical evidence now reveals that Virchow relied heavily, and without crediting, on the work of Robert Remak on the development of chicken embryoes in the 1840s. • However the phrase Omnis cellula e cellula, which means "Every cell is derived from another cell.“ originates from François Raspail (1794–1878) in 1830. He was wrong about how cells divided though, which is partly why he is not often included in the Cell Theory discussion. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Remak https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fran%C3%A7ois-Vincent_Raspail
Modern Cell Theory • Modern Cell Theory contains 4 statements, in addition to the original Cell Theory: • The cell contains hereditary information(DNA) which is passed on from cell to cell during cell division. • All cells are basically the same in chemical composition and metabolic activities. • All basic chemical & physiological functions are carried out inside the cells. (movement, digestion, etc) • Cell activity depends on the activities of sub-cellular structures within the cell (organelles, nucleus, plasma membrane)