Title: Figure 7'1 The size range of cells
1Figure 7.1 The size range of cells
2Table 7.1 Different Types of Light Microscopy A
Comparison
3Figure 7.3 Cell fractionation
4Figure 7.4 A prokaryotic cell
5Figure 7.4x2 E. coli
6Figure 7.5 Geometric relationships explain why
most cells are microscopic
7Figure 7.7 Overview of an animal cell
8Figure 7.8 Overview of a plant cell
9Figure 7.9 The nucleus and its envelope
10Figure 7.10 Ribosomes
11Figure 7.11 Endoplasmic reticulum (ER)
12Figure 7.12 The Golgi apparatus
13Figure 7.13 Lysosomes
14Figure 7.14 The formation and functions of
lysosomes (Layer 3)
15Figure 7.15 The plant cell vacuole
16Figure 7.16 Review relationships among
organelles of the endomembrane system
17Figure 7.17 The mitochondrion, site of cellular
respiration
18Figure 7.18 The chloroplast, site of
photosynthesis
19Figure 7.19 Peroxisomes
20Figure 7.20 The cytoskeleton
21Figure 7.21 Motor molecules and the cytoskeleton
22Table 7.2 The structure and function of the
cytoskeleton
23Figure 7.22 Centrosome containing a pair of
centrioles
24Figure 7.23 A comparison of the beating of
flagella and cilia
25Figure 7.24 Ultrastructure of a eukaryotic
flagellum or cilium
26Figure 7.25 How dynein walking moves cilia and
flagella
27Figure 7.26 A structural role of microfilaments
28Figure 7.27 Microfilaments and motility
29Figure 7.28 Plant cell walls
30Figure 7.29 Extracellular matrix (ECM) of an
animal cell
31Figure 7.30 Intercellular junctions in animal
tissues