Cell Structure
Cell Structure
Key Knowledge:
• Cells as the basic structural unit of life, including the distinction between prokaryotes and eukaryotes
• The structure and specialisation of plant and animal cell organelles for distinct functions, including
chloroplasts and mitochondria
CELLS
All cells share four basic features:
• They are enclosed by a membrane, which separates internal contents from the external environment
• They contain an internal fluid called the cytosol, in which various biological processes are able to occur
• There is genetic material, which functions as a set of instructions (i.e. a blueprint) for cellular activity
• They possess ribosomes, which function to translate specific genetic instructions within the cell
TYPES OF CELLS
Cells can be categorised into either of two main groups:
Prokaryotes:
• Usually unicellular and lack compartmentalisation
• Do not possess a nucleus or membrane bound organelles
• DNA is circular, unpackaged (naked) and usually lacks introns
• Cells are smaller in size (~1–5µm) and contain 70S ribosomes
Eukaryotes:
• Have compartmentalised structures and may be multicellular
• Possess a nucleus and numerous membrane bound organelles
• DNA is linear, packaged with histone proteins and contain introns
• Cells are larger in size (~10–100µm) and contain 80S ribosomes Eukaryotic vs Prokaryotic Cell
PROKARYOTIC CLASSIFICATION
Prokaryotes are typically unicellular organisms that are classified into two distinct domains:
• Bacteria: A diverse domain that includes all traditional bacterial species (including all pathogenic forms)
• Archaea: Includes most extremophiles (found in adverse environments – like high temperatures)
Bacterial species can be further categorised according to a variety of structural or functional conditions;
including shape (spheres vs rods vs spirals vs other), nutritional patterns (autotrophic vs heterotrophic),
gaseous requirements (anaerobic vs aerobic) and cell wall composition (Gram negative vs Gram positive)
Flagella
Cytoplasm
Ribosomes (70S)
Pili
Slime Capsule (glycocalyx)
ENDOSYMBIOSIS
Eukaryotic cells are believed to have evolved from prokaryotic cells via the theory of endosymbiosis.
According to this theory, an early bacterium was engulfed by another prokaryote via phagocytosis, but the
engulfed cell remained undigested and contributed new functionality to the cell. Over time, the engulfed
cell lost some of its independent utility and became an organelle (e.g. chloroplast or mitochondrion).
EUKARYOTIC KINGDOMS
nucleus cytosol
nucleolus
rough ER cytoskeleton
peroxisome
mitochondrion
Golgi body
nucleus
mitochondrion
endoplasmic
reticulum vacuole
CELL MICROGRAPHS
Sub-cellular structures can be identified using electron microscopes and used to determine types of cells.
Prokaryotic Cell Micrographs: 1 = Nucleoid ; 2 = Sex Pili (Conjugation) ; 3 = Cell Wall ; 4 = Flagella