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Section 1: Discovering Cells What are Cells?

Section 1: Discovering Cells What are Cells?. Cells are the basic units of structure and function in living things. How can we see cells?. Cells are two small to be seen with the naked eye so we must use a microscope. What is a Microscope?.

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Section 1: Discovering Cells What are Cells?

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  1. Section 1: Discovering CellsWhat are Cells? • Cells are the basic units of structure and function in living things

  2. How can we see cells? • Cells are two small to be seen with the naked eye so we must use a microscope

  3. What is a Microscope? • A microscope is an instrument that makes small objects look larger • A compound microscope contains more than one lens

  4. How do Microscopes Work? • Some microscopes use lenses to focus light onto an object • The lenses in light microscopes are similar to the clear curved pieces of glass used in eyeglasses

  5. Who was Robert Hooke? • He was one of the first people to observe cells • He observed cork cells using a microscope he had built himself

  6. Who was Anton van Leeuwenhoek? • He was a Dutch businessmanwho observed water from a pond and was the first person to see what are now called bacteria

  7. What is the cell theory? • A widely accepted explanation of the relationship between cells and living things

  8. For a light microscope to be useful what two properties must be combined? • Magnification • Resolution

  9. What is Magnification? • The ability to make things look larger than they are

  10. How do light microscopes make things look bigger? • The lens or lenses in a light microscope magnify an object by bending the light that passes through them

  11. What is a Convex Lens? • A lens with a curved shape • These lenses cause the light passing through the sides to bend inward; when this light hits the eye the object seems larger

  12. How does a compound microscope magnify an object even more? • It has more than one lens • Light passes through a specimen and then through two lenses

  13. How do you calculate total magnification? • The total magnification is equal to the magnification of the two lenses multiplied together • Example: First lens(10) second lens(40) total = 400

  14. What is resolution? • The ability to clearly distinguish the individual parts of an object • Another term for sharpness

  15. What other kind of microscopes are there? • Electron Microscopes – use a beam of electrons instead of light to examine a specimen

  16. Section 2: What is inside a cell? • Organelles – tiny cell structures that carry out specific functions within the cell

  17. What is the structure surrounding the cell? • Cellwall - a rigid layer of nonliving material that surrounds the cells of plants and some other organelles

  18. What is the cell wall made of? • Cellulose – a tough, yet flexible, material • Wood contains a lot of cellulose

  19. What is the function of the cell wall? • A plant’s cell wall helps to protect and support the cell • Cell walls allow trees to stand so tall

  20. If the cell wall is so stiff can materials still pass through the cell wall? • Yes, many materials, including water and oxygen, can pass through the cell wall

  21. What is just inside the cell wall? • Cellmembrane– controls what substances come into and out of a cell • All cells have cell membranes

  22. How does the cell membrane allow things to pass through? • There are tiny pores in the membrane that allow things to pass through like a windowscreen

  23. What is the large, oval structure located within the cell? • Nucleus – the cell’s control center, directing all of the cell’s activities

  24. What is found within and surrounding the nucleus? • Nuclear Membrane • Chromatin • Nucleolus

  25. What structure surrounds the nucleus? • The nuclearmembrane –protects the nucleus

  26. How does the nucleus know how to direct the cell? • Chromatin– strands the contain genetic material, the instructions that direct the functions of a cell

  27. What is the smaller structure located within the nucleus? • Nucleolus – where ribosomes are made (ribosomes are the organelles where proteins are produced)

  28. What is the clear, thick, gel-like fluid outside of the nucleus? • Cytoplasm – the region between the cellmembrane and the nucleus

  29. Where are most cell organelles found? In the Cytoplasm: • Mitochondria • Endoplasmic Reticulum • Ribosomes • Golgi Bodies • Chloroplasts • Vacuoles • Lysosomes

  30. What are the rod-shaped structures located within the cytoplasm? • Mitochondria – known as the “powerhouses”of the cell because they produce most of the energy the cell needs to carry out its functions

  31. What forms a maze of passageways? • The endoplasmicreticulum– the passageways carry proteins and other materials from one part of the cell to another

  32. What is attached to the outer surface of the endoplasmic reticulum? • Ribsomes – Small grainlike bodies • Can also be found floating in the cytoplasm • Function as factories to produce proteins

  33. What are the structures that look like a flattened collection of sacs and tubes? • GolgiBodies – receive proteins and other new materials, package them, and distribute them to other parts of the cell • Known as the cell’s mailroom

  34. What are the large green structures in the cytoplasm? • Chloroplasts – capture energy from sunlight and use it to produce food for the cell • Animal cells do not have these; plant cells do • These give plants their color

  35. What is the large, round, water-filled sac in the cytoplasm? • Vacuoles – The storage area of the cell • Most plant cells have one large vacuole

  36. What else can be found in the cytoplasm? • Lysosome - Small, round structures that contain chemicals that break down large food particles into smaller ones

  37. How are bacterial cells different from plant and animal cells? • Smaller • No nucleus - genetic material is found in the cytoplasm

  38. Are we made up of all the same cells? • No, we are made up of many differentcells(skin, bone, etc.) • Cells are structured to suit their unique function

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