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The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7 Powerpoint #2 Honors Biology
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The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7 Powerpoint #2 Honors Biology

Jan 02, 2016

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The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7 Powerpoint #2 Honors Biology. Cell Theory and the Scientists Who Helped Shape It. Scientists and the Cell Theory. Anton van Leeuwenhoek. Born: October 24, 1632 Died: August 30, 1723 He is known as the “ Father of Microscopy. ”. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

The Cell:History and Theory

Chapter 7 Powerpoint #2

Honors Biology

Page 2: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Cell Theory and the Scientists Who Helped

Shape It

Page 3: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Scientists and the Cell Theory

Page 4: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Anton van Leeuwenhoek

• Born: October 24, 1632• Died: August 30, 1723

• He is known as the “Father of Microscopy.”

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anton_van_Leeuwenhoek

Page 5: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Anton van Leeuwenhoek• Discoveries:

- 1673: He looked at pond scum under the microscope and discovered small organisms he called animalcules or little animals (Protists)- 1676: discovered

bacteriahttp://www.kent.k12.wa.us/staff/TimLynch/sci_class/chap09/lesson_protista/Protista_Lesson.html#Algae

Page 6: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Robert Hooke

• Born: July 18, 1635• Died: March 3, 1703

• Wrote and published “Micrographia”

• Known as the “English Father of Microscopy”

http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/PictDisplay/Hooke.html

Page 7: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Robert Hooke

Contributions:

- He observed pieces of cork from the bark of a cork tree under the microscope.

- His observations led him to coin the word “cell.”

- “Cell”- means little rooms in Latin

- He compared the small boxes to the small rooms that monks lived in.

http://www.learner.org/channel/courses/essential/life/session1/closer1.html

Page 8: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Matthias Schleiden

• Born: April 5, 1804• Died: June 23, 1881

• German botanist

• Discovered that all plants were made of cells

• Contributed to the creation of the cell theory

http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9066147/Mathias-Jacob-Schleiden

Page 9: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Theodor Schwann

• Born: December 7, 1810• Died: January 11, 1882

• German zoologist

• Concluded that all animals are made of cells.

• Contributed to the creation of the cell theory http://www.nndb.com/people/357/000096069/

Page 10: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Rudolph Virchow• Born: October 13, 1821• Died: September 5, 1902

• German pathologist

• He is known as the

“Father of Pathology.”

• Discovered that all living cells come only from other living cells.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Rudolf_Virchow.jpg

Page 11: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

The Cell Theory

1. All living things are made of cells.

2. Cells are the basic units of structure and function in living things.

3. Living cells come only from other living cells.

Page 12: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Two Main Types of CellsProkaryote• generally smaller and simpler• DO NOT have a nucleus –

DNA is not contained• All prokaryotic organisms are unicellular• example: all bacteria

Page 13: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Two Main Types of CellsEukaryote = “true nucleus”• Contains a nucleus • Contains dozens of specialized cell parts

(organelles)• Some unicellular organisms,

many multicellular• example: all plants, animals, and fungi

Page 14: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Cell Types (Review)

Eukaryotic

1. Contains a nucleus and other membrane bound organelles.

2. Rod shaped chromosomes

3. Found in all kingdoms except the Eubacteria and Archaebacteria

Prokaryotic

1. Does not contain a nucleus or other membrane bound organelles.

2. Circular chromosome

3. Found only in the Eubacteria and Archaebacteria Kingdoms

Page 15: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Two Main Types of Cells

Prokaryote vs. Eukaryote

Both:• Have a cell membrane• Contain DNA• Have cytoplasm with ribosomes

Page 16: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Prokaryotes Eukaryotes

Cell membraneContain DNARibosomesCytoplasm

NucleusEndoplasmic reticulum

Golgi apparatusLysosomesVacuoles

MitochondriaCytoskeleton

Page 17: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Parts and Functions of Eukaryotic Cells

Page 18: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Organelles

• “mini-organs”• Each part of a cell with a specific job

is called an organelle

Page 19: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Cell-City Analogy• Just as a city is made up of many different components,

each with respective functions that they perform for the city to thrive, a cell is also made of structures (organelles), each with specific roles and duties.

Page 20: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Nucleus• Contains the genetic

material (DNA) & controls the cell’s activities

• Provides protection for nuclear material

• Made of 3 parts: – (1) nuclear envelope– (2) nucleolus– (3) chromatin

Page 21: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Nuclear Envelope• Double –membrane layer that

surrounds the nucleus of a cell

Page 22: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Nucleolus• Small, dense region within most

nuclei that produces rRNA

Page 23: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Ribosome• Site of protein synthesis• May be either free-floating or

attached to E.R.

Page 24: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Endoplasmic Reticulum • Network of transport

Channels• 2 Kinds

– Smooth ER(SER): Synthesis of lipids and steroids

– Rough ER (RER): Synthesis and processing of proteins (ribosomes make it “rough”)

Page 25: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Golgi Apparatus • Packages proteins from the RER for secretion.• Packages lipids & steroids from the SER in to

vesicles to send to other organelles, or out of the cell.

Page 26: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Lysosome• Membrane-enclosed sac of enzymes needed to

break down cellular debris • recycling the cell's organic material• Made by the Golgi apparatus

Page 27: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Mitochondrion • Releases energy from glucose (cellular

respiration)• Makes ATP, the main energy source for almost

all cell processes.

Page 28: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Cytoplasm• Contents of a cell inside the

cell membrane but outside of the nucleus.

• The gel-like substance in the cytoplasm is called cytosol

Page 29: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Cell Membrane• Thin, Flexible barrier around a cell that regulates

what enters and leaves the cell.• More about this later…

Page 30: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Microtubule

• Long, thin filament that functions in the movement and support of the cell

• Hollow tube of protein that maintains cell shape and functions as a “track” along which organelles move through the cell

Cell membrane

Endoplasmicreticulum

Microtubule

Microfilament

Ribosomes Mitochondrion

CytoskeletonMicrofilament

Page 31: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Animal Cells ONLY !!!

Page 32: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Centriole• One of two small cylindrical structures

near the nuclear envelope of animal cells.• It helps organize microtubules during cell

division• Helps build cilia & flagella

Page 33: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology
Page 34: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Plant Cells ONLY !!!

Page 35: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Cell Wall• Provides structure and

protection to the cell. Found outside cell membrane in plants, algae, and some bacteria

• Made of:– Cellulose – Plants– Chitin – Fungi– Peptidoglycan - Bacteria

Page 36: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Chloroplast• Converts energy

from the sun into chemical energy, in the form of glucose

Page 37: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology
Page 38: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Vacuole • Membrane-bound sac, largest structure in

plant cell• Helps maintain water pressure in the cell• Site in the cell where water, salts, proteins,

and carbohydrates are stored

Page 39: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology
Page 40: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7    Powerpoint #2  Honors Biology

Animal Cells Plant Cells

Centrioles

Cell membraneRibosomes

NucleusEndoplasmic reticulum

Golgi apparatusLysosomesVacuoles

MitochondriaCytoskeleton

Cell WallChloroplasts