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This article explores the structure and function of cells, including the Cell Theory, why most cells are microscopic, types of microscopes, magnification and resolution, advancements in viewing techniques, and an overview of prokaryotic cells.
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Cell Theory • Based upon work of Theodor Schwann, Matthais Schleiden and Rudolph Virchow. • All organisms are composed of cells • Cells are the basic units of structure and function in organisms • Cells come only from preexisting cells because cells are self-reproducing.
Why are most cells microscopic? • Cells need a large surface area to adequately exchange nutrients and wastes • surface-area-to-volume ratio • Total surface area (HxWxSxC) divided by total volume (HxWxLxC) • Some organelles have microvilli, villi and rugae to increase surface area
Microscopes • 17th century – Leewenhooke • Compound Light Microscope • Uses light rays and glass lenses to focus
Transmission Electron Microscope • Electrons pass through the specimen • Focus by magnetic lenses • Image projected on fluorescent screen
Scanning electron microscope • Narrow beam of electrons scan surface of specimen • Specimen is coated with metal layer • Secondary electrons given off by metal produce an image on a screen
Magnification and Resolution • Light microscope = approx. 1000x • TEM = hundreds of thousands • Difference is in illumination – wavelength of electrons is shorter than wavelength of light. • Greater resolution=greater detail • Resolution – minimum distance between 2 objects at which they can still be seen as two separate objects. • If humans eyes are set at 1.0, LM=500, EM = 100,000 resolving power.
Viewing advancements • To increase the contrast of a specimen, different types of light, staining and optical methods can be used. • Confocal microscopy – 3-D using laser beam. • Video enhanced contrast microscopy
Prokaryotic Cells • Lack nucleus and membrane bound organelles • Can cause disease, decompose and help to make foods/chemicals • Classified into 2 Domains
Structure • Bacillus – rod shaped • Coccus – sphere shaped • Spirilla – rigid twisted rods • (called spirochetes if flexible)
Cell envelope • Plasma membrane – phospholipid bilayer embedded with proteins • Regulates materials into and out of the cytoplasm • Internal pouches – mesosomes – increase surface area for enzymes Cell wall – contains peptidoglycan – maintains shape Glycocalyx – layer of polysaccharides outside of cell wall, aids in protection from immune system and attachment capsule – if organized and hard to remove slime layer – if unorganized and easy to remove
Cytoplasm • Nucleoid region – houses the single circular strand of DNA • Plasmid – extrachromosomal piece of circular DNA used as vector in GE • Ribosomes • Inclusion body – stored nutrients
Cyanobacteria • Photosynthetic bacteria • Contain thylakoids in cytoplasm that contain chlorophyll that absorb solar energy to produce carbs. • Release oxygen
Appendages – made of protein • Flagella – locomotion, made of filament, hook and basal body • Fimbriae – small, bristlelike fibers on surface of cell, attachment • Sex Pili – rigid tubular structures, exchanging DNA - conjugation
Domain: Archaea • No peptidoglycan in cell wall • More diverse in shape • May be more closely related to eukaryotes because of biochemical make-up. • Live in extreme habitats, like those of long ago…