A2.2 Cell Structure Notes
A2.2 Cell Structure Notes
2 Cell Structure
Theme: A Unity & Diversity
Level of organisation: Cells
Guiding Questions:
What are the features common to all cells and the features that differ?
How is microscopy used to investigate cell structure?
Calculating Magnification
Calculation of the magnification of
drawings and the actual size of Structures
& Ultrastructure shown in drawings or
micrographs.
• Magnification =
Image ¿ drawing ¿ ¿
Actual ¿ real ¿ ¿ ¿
• Must have same units
• 1mm = 1000µm
• Use ruler & Compare scale in diagram
to figure out the magnification
• Light microscopes limited cannot produce structures smaller than 0.2µm & many biological
structures are smaller
• Electron microscope developed in 1930-1950 allowed images of structures as small as 0.001µm
(x200 of light microscope) which allowed us to discovered the features of ultrastructure of the cells.
Nutrition
Cell wall
Size of
vacuoles
Organelles
Motility
(mobile)
DNA
Organelles
Reproduction
Average size
Normal conditions
Positioning: Center drawing on the page. Do not draw in a corner. This will leave plenty of room for the
addition of labels.
Size: Make a large, clear drawing; it should occupy at least half a page.
Labels: Use a ruler to draw straight, horizontal lines. The labels should form a vertical list. All labels
should be printed (not cursive).
Technique: Lines are clear and not smudged. Avoid ‘feathery’ pencil lines and gaps. There are almost no
erasures or stray marks on the paper. Color is used carefully to enhance the drawing. Stippling is used
instead of shading.
Accuracy: Draw what is seen; not what should be there. Avoid making “idealized”drawings. Do not
necessarily draw everything that is seen in the field of view. Draw only what is asked for. Show only as
much as necessary for an understanding of the structure – a small section shown in detail will often suffice.
It is time consuming and unnecessary, for example, to reproduce accurately the entire contents of a
microscopic field. When drawing low power plans do not draw individual cells. Show only the distribution
of tissues. When making high power drawings, draw only a few representative cells; indicate thickness of
walls, membranes, etc.
Title: The title should state what has been drawn and what lens power it was drawn under (for example,
phrased as: drawn as seen through 400X magnification). Title is informative, centered, and larger than
other text. The title should always include the scientific name (which is italicized or underlined).
Guiding Questions:
What are the features common to all cells and the features that differ?
How is microscopy used to investigate cell structure?
Calculating Magnification
Calculation of the magnification of
drawings and the actual size of Structures
& Ultrastructure shown in drawings or
micrographs.
• Magnification =
Image ¿ drawing ¿ ¿
Actual ¿ real ¿ ¿ ¿
• Must have same units
• 1mm = 1000µm
• Use ruler & Compare scale in diagram
to figure out the magnification
• Light microscopes limited cannot produce structures smaller than 0.2µm & many biological
structures are smaller
• Electron microscope developed in 1930-1950 allowed images of structures as small as 0.001µm
(x200 of light microscope) which allowed us to discovered the features of ultrastructure of the cells.
Freeze-fracture
• Freeze-fracture: rapidly frozen specimen can be cracked, causing a fracture through the weakest
link and separated
• This produces a plane through the samples that exposes the internal structure
• The structure are then replicated by applying a thin layer of metal on top of the structure and the
replica is then studied using the EM
• This method was used to demonstrate presence of integral membrane proteins within the plasma
membrane – crack occur along line of weakness which is the centre of membrane & phospholipid
bilayer splits open
Prokaryotes Eukaryotes
Peptidoglycan cell wall Cell wall has no peptidoglycan Plants have cellulose cell wall
Have one RNA polymerase Have 3 RNA polymerase several type of rRNA
Labels: Use a ruler to draw straight, horizontal lines. The labels should form a vertical list. All labels
should be printed (not cursive).
Technique: Lines are clear and not smudged. Avoid ‘feathery’ pencil lines and gaps. There are almost no
erasures or stray marks on the paper. Color is used carefully to enhance the drawing. Stippling is used
instead of shading.
Accuracy: Draw what is seen; not what should be there. Avoid making “idealized”drawings. Do not
necessarily draw everything that is seen in the field of view. Draw only what is asked for. Show only as
much as necessary for an understanding of the structure – a small section shown in detail will often suffice.
It is time consuming and unnecessary, for example, to reproduce accurately the entire contents of a
microscopic field. When drawing low power plans do not draw individual cells. Show only the distribution
of tissues. When making high power drawings, draw only a few representative cells; indicate thickness of
walls, membranes, etc.
Title: The title should state what has been drawn and what lens power it was drawn under (for example,
phrased as: drawn as seen through 400X magnification). Title is informative, centered, and larger than
other text. The title should always include the scientific name (which is italicized or underlined).