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History of Cells

History of Cells. What is a Cell?. Cell. A cell has all the items necessary to carry out life’s activities. Every living thing has at least one cell. Need a microscope b/c smaller than a period at the end of a sentence. Ex. Chicken egg. What does a cell look alike?.

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History of Cells

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  1. History of Cells

  2. What is a Cell?

  3. Cell • A cell has all the items necessary to carry out life’s activities. • Every living thing has at least one cell. • Need a microscope b/c smaller than a period at the end of a sentence. Ex. Chicken egg

  4. What does a cell look alike?

  5. Human red and white blood cells

  6. Human embryo

  7. Mitosis – Cell Division

  8. White cells moving to attack

  9. A human nerve cell

  10. Human liver cells

  11. Cancer cells in a human liver

  12. Volvox – a protist

  13. Euglena – plant-like protist Amoeba

  14. Paramecium – a protist Animal-like protist

  15. The largest cell – what is it?

  16. So, who are the important people in history and discovery of cells

  17. Hans and Zacharias Janssen • Dutch lens grinders, father and son • produced first compound microscope (2 lenses)

  18. Robert Hooke • Discovered cells in 1665 • English scientist • Wasn’t even looking for cells! He was trying to impress other scientists. • Made a slide of Cork tree & looked at it with a simple microscope. • looked at a thin slice of cork (oak cork) through a compound microscope • observed tiny, hollow, roomlike structures • called these structures 'cells' because they reminded him of the rooms that monks lived in • only saw the outer walls (cell walls) because cork cells are not alive

  19. The 1st Cell • Looked like 100’s of little boxes or honeycomb • Hooke named them cells, which means “little rooms” in Latin. • Hooke thought cells were only in plants & fungi b/c they have cell walls.

  20. Anton van Leeuwenhoek • Dutch fabric merchant and amateur scientist • 1673 • looked at blood, rainwater, scrapings from teeth through a simple microscope (1 lens) • observed living cells; called some 'animalcules' which means “little animals.” • some of the small 'animalcules' are now called bacteria Humans & dogs have flatter blood cells. Fish, birds, & frogs have oval shaped blood cells.

  21. Matthias Schleiden • German botanist • 1838, 2 centuries later, realized that all living things had cells by looking at plants. • viewed plant parts under a microscope • discovered that plant parts are made of cells “Hmmm…do all the parts of a plant have cells?”

  22. Theodor Schwann • 1839 • German • Found that all animals have cells • Co-wrote the Cell Theory w/ Rudolf Virchow. “Animals are full of cells!”

  23. Rudolph Virchow • (1855) • German doctor, anthropologist, public health activist, pathologist, pre-historian, biologist and politician. • stated that all living cells come only from other living cells • He is referred to as the "Father of Pathology".

  24. Other important dates: 1830 – Joseph Jackson Lister – invent prototype for the compound microscope 1932 – Frits Zernike invented the phase-contrast microscope. The phase-contrast microscope that allowed for the study of colorless and transparent biological materials

  25. 1931 – Ernst Ruska and Max Knoll invented the electron microscope. Electron microscope make it possible to view objects as small as the diameter of an atom. 1981 – Gerd Binnig and Heinrich Rohrer invented the scanning tunneling microscope. The scanning tunneling microscope that gives three-dimensional images of objects down to the atomic level.

  26. Lynn Margulis • Theory-believes that one-celled organisms gave rise to the cells we have today. • Her theory is that 1.2 billion years old larger cells began eating smaller cells Ex. White blood cells and other cells • But, some small cells resisted and changed the larger cell.

  27. Robert Brown • Around 1833 reported the discovery of the nucleus. • Brown was a naturalist who visited the "colonies of • Australia" from 1801 through 1805, where he • cataloged and described over 1,700 new species of • plants.

  28. The Cell Theory The modern tenets of the Cell Theory include:     1. all known living things are made up of cells.    2. the cell is structural & functional unit of all living things.   3. all cells come from pre-existing cells by division.             (Spontaneous Generation does not occur).    4. cells contains hereditary information which is passed from cell to cell during cell division.    5. All cells are basically the same in chemical composition.    6. all energy flow (metabolism & biochemistry) of life occurs within cells.    

  29. Prokaryotic Cells No nucleus No membrane covering the organelles Circular DNA Bacteria Eukaryotic Cells Nucleus Membrane covering the organelles Linear DNA Are all other cells 2 Types of Cells

  30. Hereditary Material • DNA- deoxyribonucleic acid • Controls all the cells activities • Contains the info. for making new cells.

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