Cell%20Size - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Cell%20Size

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Why are Cells Small? cells must exchange nutrients & other molecules with their environment food must come in and wastes go out the cell membrane is the only way in ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cell%20Size


1
Cell Size
2
Why are Cells Small?
  • cells must exchange nutrients other molecules
    with their environment
  • food must come in and wastes go out
  • the cell membrane is the only way in and out of
    the cytoplasm
  • the cell membrane has a limited surface area
  • the cytoplasm has a volume to feed or have
    wastes removed

3
Surface area of a cell
  • If it were a perfect square, how would you
    calculate surface area?
  • Each side is 1 x 11unit squared, 6 sides
    therefore, surface area 6 units squared

Distance equals on unit
4
Volume of a cell - cytoplasm
Distance equals one unit
  • Volume equals Length x Width x Height
  • Thus the volume equals 1 x 1 x 1
  • Volume equals 1 unit cubed

5
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6
Comparison of Size, Surface Area Volume
Cell size Surface area (units2) Volume (units3) Ratio of SA/V
1 unit 6 1 6/1
2 units 24 8 24/8 3/1
3 units 54 27 54/27 2/1
7
Conclusion
  • As cell size increases ratio of surface area to
    volume decreases.
  • Therefore, the rate of diffusion slows down.
  • ..thus a cell cannot get rid of wastes fast
    enough or get nutrients fast enough
  • . . . so it will either be poisoned by its wastes
    or starve.

8
Surface Area to Volume
  • Cell surface area is important in taking in
    nutrients
  • Surface area increases as the square of cell
    diameter
  • But entire cell volume needs to be fed
  • And, cell volume increases as the cube of cell
    diameter so it increases at a faster rate

9
Consider 2 Cells...

100 µm diameter
10 µm diameter
10
Surface Area to Volume
11
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12
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13
Cell types
14
Prokaryotes vs. eukaryotes
  • All living cells can be divided into two major
    types
  • Prokaryotes simple cells that lack a nucleus,
    always single-celled
  • Eukaryotes complex cells with a distinct
    nucleus, can be single-celled or multicellular

15
Prokaryotic cells
  • lack a nuclear membrane the DNA floats freely
    in the cytoplasm
  • lack any membrane-bound organelles (like
    mitochondria)

16
Plant vs. animal cells
  • Within eukaryotes, there are two major kinds of
    cells
  • Plant cells stiff cell wall gives the cell
    shape, large vacuoles, special organelles called
    chloroplasts
  • Animal cells lack cell walls and chloroplasts,
    vacuoles are small, centrioles are visible

17
What they have in common
  1. both have a cell membrane
  2. both have a nucleus with DNA inside
  3. both have many of the common organelles (ER,
    Golgi complex, etc.)
  4. both have mitochondria for making energy

18
Common structures in plant and animal cells
19
Organelles found in plant cells
  • Cell wall made of cellulose, gives cell
    strength and protection
  • Larger vacuoles store water and keep cell rigid
  • Chloroplasts make sugar from CO2 and sunlight -
    photosynthesis

20
Organelles found in animal cells
  • Centrioles attachment for the cytoskeleton,
    organise spindle fibres during cell division

21
Plant Cells Animal cells
Have a cell wall Do not have a cell wall
Have chloroplasts Do not have chloroplasts
Have large vacuoles Have small vacuoles
No visible centrioles Centrioles visible
22
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23
Some exceptions to this!
  • Protist cells
  • single-celled eukaryotes (protists) can have
    organelles typical of both plant AND animal cells
  • Fungus cells
  • multicellular eukaryotes with a cell wall made of
    chitin (the same substance in the exoskeleton of
    insects)
  • cell walls can remain open after cell division,
    and the cells are free to move back and forth
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