the cell: history and theory chapter 7 powerpoint #2 honors biology

42
The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7 Powerpoint #2 Honors Biology http://ed.ted.com/lessons/the-wacky-history-of- cell-theory#review http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2hnWzRxX2z8

Upload: madeleine-walters

Post on 28-Dec-2015

219 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7 Powerpoint #2 Honors Biology

The Cell:History and Theory

Chapter 7 Powerpoint #2

Honors Biology

http://ed.ted.com/lessons/the-wacky-history-of-cell-theory#reviewhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2hnWzRxX2z8

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

bacteria using his teeth gunk

http://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 Theory1. All living things are made of cells.

(Not made of cells=not living)

2. Cells are the basic units of structure and function in living things (anything smaller than cell=not living)

3. Living cells come only from other living cells (reproduction)

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

Two Main Types of CellsProkaryote(Pro=before, karyo=nucleus)• generally smaller and simpler• DO NOT have a nucleus –

DNA free-floating• No membrane bound organelles• All prokaryotic organisms are unicellular• Have cell walls• example: all bacteria

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

Two Main Types of CellsEukaryote (Eu=true, karyo=nucleus)• Big, complex• 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

Viruses

• Have genetic material• NOT LIVING!!!!• Can only survive in host

cell

Page 16: 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 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

Chromatin• combination of DNA and proteins

Page 24: 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 25: 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 26: 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 27: 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 28: 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 29: 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 30: 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 31: 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 32: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7 Powerpoint #2 Honors Biology

Animal Cells ONLY !!!

Page 33: 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 34: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7 Powerpoint #2 Honors Biology
Page 35: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7 Powerpoint #2 Honors Biology

Plant Cells ONLY !!!

Page 36: 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 37: 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 38: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7 Powerpoint #2 Honors Biology
Page 39: 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 40: The Cell: History and Theory Chapter 7 Powerpoint #2 Honors Biology
Page 41: 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

Compare Cell Sizes