inside cells

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Inside Cells

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Inside Cells. All living things are made of cells. Cells come in MANY shapes and sizes. Some organisms like bacteria are only one-cell big. Others like a mammal have several trillion cells. You already know that cells are very small. You have to use a microscope to even see one. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Inside Cells

Inside Cells

Page 2: Inside Cells

All living things are made of cells.

Page 3: Inside Cells

Cells come in MANY shapes and sizes.

Page 4: Inside Cells

Some organisms like bacteria are only one-cell big. Others like a

mammal have several trillion cells.

Page 5: Inside Cells

You already know that cells are very small. You have to use a microscope to even see one.

Page 6: Inside Cells

If red blood cells were placed end-to-end it would take 150 cells to equal the thickness of a penny!

Page 7: Inside Cells

The cells in our brain, bones, heart, and blood all have special jobs.

Page 8: Inside Cells

Even though the cells do different jobs, they have the same basic

parts inside, called ORGANELLES.(Write the definition of “oragnelle”)

Page 9: Inside Cells

Let’s take a tour through a cell…(take notes as 3 columns of a graphic organizer. Label

the columns NAME, FUNCTION, CANDY)

Page 10: Inside Cells

The outside of every cell is surrounded by the CELL MEMBRANE, which is kinda like a thin, squishy baggie.

Page 11: Inside Cells

The job of the CELL MEMBRANE is to decide what comes in and what

stays out. It is full of holes.

Page 12: Inside Cells

The whole inside of the cell is filled with gooey slime called

CYTOPLASM.

Page 13: Inside Cells

The job of CYTOPLASM is to hold the organelles in place and swish

chemicals around.

Page 14: Inside Cells

The big dark circle thing in cells is the NUCLEUS.

Page 15: Inside Cells

The NUCLEUS is the boss – it controls the activities of all the

other organelles.

Page 16: Inside Cells

Inside of the nucleus are many CHROMOSOMES. They contain the instructions for making every part of the cell. Usually they look like

strands of spaghetti.

Page 17: Inside Cells

When the cell is ready to divide, the CHROMOSOMES condense into

“worm” shapes and pair up. Like twirling the spaghetti on a fork

Page 18: Inside Cells

The NUCLEUS sends out instructions for making proteins, or repairing the

cell, or dividing the cell. These instructions, called RNA are like

chemical text messages.

Page 19: Inside Cells

The RNA instructions go to the RIBOSOMES. Ribosomes follow the

instructions to make different kinds of proteins.

Ribs are made of Protein.

Ribs remind me of RIBosomes

Page 20: Inside Cells

Proteins are used to make just about everything, not just meat

(muscle).

Page 21: Inside Cells

These proteins are shipped all over the cell on the ENDOPLASMIC

RETICULUM (or just ER for short).

Page 22: Inside Cells

The ER is like a giant freeway system that goes through the entire cell. The RIBOSOMES are tiny little dots on the

ER.

Page 23: Inside Cells

The ER might deliver these proteins to the GOLGI, that package them for transport.

Page 24: Inside Cells

Another large part of the cell is the VACUOLE. It stores water, and

sometimes other things.

Page 25: Inside Cells

Just like anything that is alive, cells have waste products that need to be

recycled. This is the job of the LYSOSOMES.

Page 26: Inside Cells

The prefix “lys” means “break apart” So the lysosomes break apart old,

worn out parts so they can be recycled into new stuff. They go around

“eating” stuff like pac man.(Why do you think the name LYSOL was chosen?)

Page 27: Inside Cells

MITOCHONDRIA take the energy in sugar and turn it into fuel that the cell can use. They are the power

suppliers for the cell.

Page 28: Inside Cells

MITOCHONDRIA are mighty and full of muscle (or at least there are

lots of them in muscle) Why?

Page 29: Inside Cells

CHLOROPLASTS are found only in plant cells, but they have a job kinda like

mitochondria. They convert sunlight to sugar, that can then be sent to the

mitochondria.

Page 30: Inside Cells

CHLOROPLASTS have a chemical inside called chlorophyll. This chemical is what makes plants

appear green.

Page 31: Inside Cells

Plants also have another cool feature. They have a second outer layer called

a CELL WALL. This is what makes plants rigid, and keeps trees from

falling over.

Page 32: Inside Cells

CELL WALLS are made of cellulose, which can’t be digested by most

animals – that’s why it is the main ingredient in metamucil.

Page 33: Inside Cells

The