Cell: The Building Block of Life
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๐ฏ Learning Objectives
- Understand how scientists study cells using microscopes
- Describe the structure of cell membrane, cell wall, and cell interior
- Explain the functions of all cell organelles in prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells
- Distinguish between mitosis and meiosis
- State the Cell Theory and understand contact inhibition and cancer
๐ Chapter Index
2.1 How to Study Cells? Activity 2.1: Let us estimate the size of a cell 2.2 Structure of a Cell 2.2.1 Cell membrane โ The universal feature of a cell Activity 2.2: Let us experiment 2.2.2 Cell wall โ The outer covering of cells Activity 2.3: Let us investigate 2.3 The Cell Interior โ A Coordinated Working System Activity 2.4: Let us study 2.3.1 Why do eukaryotic cells need these organelles? Nucleus โ House of coded instructions Ribosomes โ The protein factories Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER) โ Manufacturing factory Golgi apparatus โ The packaging and shipping centres Lysosomes โ The clean-up system Mitochondria โ The powerhouse of the cell Plastids โ Centre for food synthesis in the plant cells and beyond How do flowers, fruits, and vegetables acquire varied colours? Vacuoles โ The organelles for storage and support 2.4 How do Normal Cells Grow and Divide? Activity 2.5: Let us enhance our skills 2.4.1 Cell division Mitosis Meiosis 2.5 Cell Theory โ The Unifying Principle of Biology 2.5.1 Do cells grow and reproduce forever?2.1 How to Study Cells?
- The human eye can distinguish two points as separate only if they are at least 0.1 mm apart when viewed from 25 cm โ this is called the limit of resolution of the human eye.
- Most cells are too small to be seen by the unaided eye, so scientists use microscopes to study them.
- A convex lens or a combination of lenses (objective lens + eyepiece) is used for magnification โ making objects appear larger.
- Robert Hooke was the first person to observe a cell in 1665 using a self-designed microscope (200โ300X magnification). He observed thin slices of cork and named the box-like compartments ‘cells’.
- In school laboratories, light microscopes are used with different objective lenses (10X, 40X) to achieve better magnification and resolution under visible light.
- Scientists also use powerful electron microscopes that use a beam of electrons instead of light. They reveal cell structure at the nanometre scale (1 nanometre = one-billionth of a metre).
- Over the years, microscopes have been improved in three main features: resolution (clarity), contrast (difference in brightness), and magnification.
- The total magnification of a microscope = magnifying power of eyepiece ร magnifying power of objective lens. (Example: 10X eyepiece ร 10X objective = 100X total magnification)
Fig. 2.2: Structure of a light microscope
๐ฌ Activity 2.1: Let us estimate the size of a cell
- Take a transparent ruler with millimetre (mm) markings.
- Place the ruler on the stage of the microscope, focus on it using the adjustment knob and observe the diameter of the circular field of view through the eyepiece. Measure it in mm.
- Convert the diameter from mm to micrometre (ยตm). (Example: if diameter = 5 mm, then 5 ร 1000 = 5000 ยตm)
- Remove the ruler and place an onion peel slide on the stage of the microscope.
- Focus on the slide and count the number of cells present along the diameter of the field of view in one straight line.
- Estimate the real size of the cell using the formula:
Estimated size of cell = Diameter of visible field (ยตm) รท Number of cells along the diameter
(Example: 5000 ยตm รท 25 cells = 200 ยตm per cell)
Unit conversion: 1 millimetre (mm) = 1000 micrometre (ยตm)
๐ข Numerical Questions
1. The diameter of the field of view of a microscope is 4 mm. If 20 onion peel cells are seen along the diameter, what is the estimated size of one onion peel cell in ยตm?
2. A microscope has eyepiece 10X and objective 40X. What is the total magnification? If a cell appears 2 mm long, what is its actual size in ยตm?
3. If the limit of resolution of the human eye is 0.1 mm and a cell is 15 ยตm in diameter, how many times smaller is the cell than the limit of resolution?
๐ Questions
LOTS: What did Robert Hooke observe when he examined a thin slice of cork?
Medium: What is the limit of resolution of the human eye and why is it important in cell biology?
HOTS: Why do electron microscopes provide better resolution than light microscopes?
HOTS: If a microscope has an eyepiece of 10X and an objective of 40X, and a cell appears to be 1.6 mm long under this microscope โ what is the actual size of the cell? Why can we not see this cell with the naked eye?
2.2 Structure of a Cell
- Cells are organised into specialised tissues, which form organs, which work together as organ systems.
- Even when organised into tissues and organs, the cell remains the fundamental unit of structure and function in all living organisms.
- Cells interact with one another and with their surroundings through the cell boundary (cell membrane), where substances move between cells and their external environment.
- Even single-celled organisms exchange materials and respond to their environment through the cell membrane.
2.2.1 Cell membrane โ The universal feature of a cell
- The cell membrane (also called the plasma membrane) is a thin boundary that surrounds a cell and protects its contents.
- It defines the individuality of a cell.
- The cell membrane is selectively permeable โ it allows some substances to pass through while blocking others.
- It is extremely thin โ about 7 to 10 nanometres (nm) thick.
- It is made up of lipids (fats) and proteins.
- Its structure is explained by the fluid-mosaic model:
- The membrane has a lipid bilayer โ two layers of fat molecules with water-attracting (hydrophilic) heads facing outward and water-repelling (hydrophobic) tails facing inward.
- Proteins are embedded in this lipid bilayer.
- The molecules can move sideways, flip and rotate within the membrane โ so it is called fluid.
- Proteins act like gatekeepers, helping substances pass through.
- Since molecules are arranged like tiles in a mosaic, it is called the ‘mosaic’ model.
- Osmosis: The movement of water through a selectively permeable membrane from a region of more water (dilute/hypotonic solution) to a region of less water (concentrated/hypertonic solution) until concentrations equalise.
- Diffusion: The net movement of particles from higher to lower concentration โ occurs even without a membrane.
- Osmosis is the diffusion of water across a selectively permeable membrane. In plants, water from the soil enters root cells by osmosis.
- Isotonic solution: Solute concentration outside = inside the cell โ no net movement of water.
- Hypotonic solution: Solute concentration outside < inside โ water enters the cell, cell swells.
- Hypertonic solution: Solute concentration outside > inside โ water leaves the cell, cell shrinks.
Fig. 2.7: Structure of a cell membrane (Fluid-mosaic model)
๐ฌ Activity 2.2: Let us experiment (Osmosis in potato)
- Carefully cut a potato into two pieces of roughly equal size.
- Measure and record the initial weight of both pieces using a weighing balance.
- Put one piece in Beaker A with plain water.
- Put the other piece in Beaker B with 20 per cent salt or sugar solution.
- Leave them undisturbed for about an hour or until a visible change in size is observed.
- Measure and record the final weight of each piece.
- Calculate the difference between the initial and final weights.
Observation: Beaker A โ potato piece swells (water enters by osmosis โ hypotonic outside). Beaker B โ potato piece shrinks (water leaves by osmosis โ hypertonic outside).
Inference: The cell membrane allows water to move in and out but not the sugar or salt molecules.
๐ข Numerical Questions
1. A potato piece weighing 50 g is placed in plain water. After 1 hour its weight becomes 54 g. Calculate the percentage increase in weight.
2. A potato piece of 50 g is placed in 20% salt solution. After 1 hour its weight is 46 g. Calculate the percentage decrease in weight.
3. The cell membrane is 8 nm thick. Express this thickness in mm. (1 nm = 0.000001 mm)
๐ Questions
LOTS: What is the plasma membrane? Why is it called selectively permeable?
Medium: Explain the fluid-mosaic model of the cell membrane.
HOTS: If a cell is placed in a hypertonic solution, what will happen and why? What will happen if the same cell is placed in a hypotonic solution?
HOTS: Why is it important to cut potato pieces to roughly equal size and measure their initial weight before placing them in different liquids?
2.2.2 Cell wall โ The outer covering of cells
- Cells of plants, fungi, and bacteria have an additional layer outside the cell membrane called the cell wall.
- Plants cannot move from place to place, so they need a rigid structure to withstand environmental stresses like wind and rain.
- The cell wall helps leaves and flowers remain firm, maintains their shapes, and helps plants stay upright.
- Although rigid, the cell wall is permeable โ water and some dissolved minerals can pass through it.
- The combined permeability of the cell wall and selective permeability of the cell membrane help plant roots absorb water and nutrients from the soil.
- When plant cells lose water (osmosis in concentrated solution), the rigid cell wall maintains their shape โ the inner content shrinks as the cell membrane pulls away from the cell wall.
- Animal cells do not have a cell wall. Therefore, when placed in a concentrated solution, they lose water and shrink.
- Without a rigid cell wall, animal cells can change shape easily โ supporting movement and functioning of animal tissues.
- The plant cell wall is primarily made of cellulose โ a carbohydrate formed by many glucose units linked together.
- Cellulose in our diet acts as roughage, helping in digestion.
- Some microorganisms like fungi and bacteria also have a cell wall for protection and structural support.
Fig: Comparison showing cell wall in plant cell vs animal cell
๐ฌ Activity 2.3: Let us investigate (Plant vs Animal cells under microscope)
- Prepare temporary slides of a thin peel of an onion leaf or a Rhoeo (Cradle lily) leaf and mount it with safranin using a cover slip to observe plant cells under a microscope.
- Similarly, prepare a temporary slide of cheek cells by gently scraping the inner side of your cheek with a cotton swab or the blunt end of a toothpick.
- Spread the cheek cells on a clean glass slide.
- Add a drop of water followed by a few drops of methylene blue stain and carefully place a coverslip.
- Observe both the slides under a microscope.
Observation: Onion peel cells are box-shaped and regularly arranged (due to cell wall). Cheek cells are irregularly arranged (no cell wall).
Further observation: When 20% sugar solution is applied โ plant cells maintain their outer boundary but inner content shrinks (plasmolysis). Cheek cells shrink considerably as they have no cell wall to maintain shape.
๐ข Numerical Questions
1. The cell wall is 0.2 ยตm thick and the cell membrane is 8 nm thick. Express both in nm and find their ratio.
2. A plant cell placed in 15% sugar solution loses 10% of its water content. If the cell initially had 200 units of water, how many units remain?
๐ Questions
LOTS: What is the main chemical composition of the plant cell wall?
Medium: Why do plant cells not shrink when placed in a concentrated sugar solution, but animal cells do?
HOTS: What argument would you give for the necessity of a cell wall in plants but not in animals?
HOTS: What consequences would you predict for a plant cell if its cell wall were to become as flexible as a cell membrane?
2.3 The Cell Interior โ A Coordinated Working System
- Most cells have three basic parts: (1) a selectively permeable plasma membrane, (2) a semi-fluid jelly-like substance called the cytoplasm, and (3) a prominent nucleus.
- The cytoplasm contains several sub-cellular components called organelles, along with other substances โ most visible only under an electron microscope.
- A bacterial cell lacks a well-defined nucleus and membrane-bound organelles โ such cells are called prokaryotic cells (pro = primitive, karyon = nucleus). Most cellular activities occur directly in the cytoplasm.
- Plant and animal cells have a well-defined nucleus and several membrane-bound organelles โ such cells are called eukaryotic cells (eu = true, karyon = nucleus).
- In eukaryotic cells, a network of fine fibres forms the cytoskeleton โ provides structural support, maintains cell shape, and enables cell movement and internal transport.
- The cytoplasm may also store cell inclusions โ starch (in plant cells), or crystals of calcium oxalate or silica (in some plant cells).
Fig. 2.10: (a) A typical bacterial cell, (b) a typical plant cell, and (c) a typical animal cell
๐ฌ Activity 2.4: Let us study (Comparing bacterial, plant, and animal cells)
- Study the given diagrams of a bacterial cell, a plant cell, and an animal cell (Fig. 2.10a, b and c).
- Observe the different structures present in each of them.
- Record your observations in Table 2.1 โ noting the presence or absence of: cell membrane, cell wall, cytoplasm, well-defined nucleus, nucleoid, and membrane-bound organelles.
| S. No. | Cell structures | Bacterial cell | Plant cell | Animal cell |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Cell membrane | Present | Present | Present |
| 2 | Cell wall | Present | Present | Absent |
| 3 | Cytoplasm | Present | Present | Present |
| 4 | Well-defined nucleus | Absent | Present | Present |
| 5 | Nucleoid (primitive nucleus) | Present | Absent | Absent |
| 6 | Membrane-bound organelles | Absent | Present | Present |
| Characteristics | Prokaryotic cell | Eukaryotic cell |
|---|---|---|
| Primitive nucleus | Present | Absent |
| Diameter of a typical cell | 1 to 10 ยตm | 10 to 100 ยตm |
| Number of cells in an organism | Usually unicellular | Unicellular or multicellular |
| Membrane-bound organelles | Absent | Present |
| Membrane-bound nucleus | Absent | Present |
2.3.1 Why do eukaryotic cells need these organelles?
- Eukaryotic cells carry out various life processes in different cell organelles independently and simultaneously.
- Cell organelles help in building new materials, removing waste, and providing energy to the cell.
- A cell is like a tiny living factory โ each part does a specific job.
Nucleus โ House of coded instructions
- The nucleus has a double-layered covering called the nuclear membrane, which has pores that allow transfer of material between the nucleus and cytoplasm.
- The nucleolus is the dense round body inside the nucleus โ site of synthesis of ribosomal subunits. These subunits exit the nucleus to the cytoplasm where they assemble to form ribosomes.
- The nucleus contains chromosomes โ visible as rod-shaped structures only when the cell is about to divide.
- Chromosomes contain information for inheritance of characters in the form of DNA (Deoxyribonucleic acid) molecules.
- Chromosomes are composed of DNA and specific proteins.
- The functional segments of DNA are called genes.
- In a non-dividing cell, DNA is present as chromatin material โ visible as an entangled mass of thread-like structures.
- When the cell is about to divide, chromatin material gets organised into chromosomes.
- In prokaryotic cells, DNA is present as a single circular molecule with specific proteins in a region called the nucleoid.
- Interesting fact: Mature Red Blood Cells (RBCs) in humans do not have a nucleus (enucleate). The absence of a nucleus provides more space for haemoglobin, allowing more oxygen transport. Since they lack a nucleus, they cannot repair or divide and survive only about 120 days.
Fig. 2.11 & 2.12: Structure of a nucleus and from cell to DNA
๐ Questions
LOTS: What is the function of the nucleolus?
Medium: What is chromatin material and how does it relate to chromosomes?
HOTS: Why do mature Red Blood Cells (RBCs) not have a nucleus? What are the advantages and disadvantages of this?
HOTS: How does the nucleus control the activities of a cell?
Ribosomes โ The protein factories
- Ribosomes are tiny structures present either freely in the cytoplasm or attached to the endoplasmic reticulum.
- Ribosomes are the sites of protein synthesis โ they are the protein factories of the cell.
- They are assembled in the cytoplasm from subunits produced in the nucleolus.
- Ribosomes are present in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells.
Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER) โ Manufacturing factory
- The Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER) is a large organelle that spreads like a network within the cytoplasm.
- The ER is continuous with the outer membrane of the nuclear envelope.
- It plays a key role in the synthesis and transport of proteins, fats (lipids), and some hormones in specialised cells.
- There are two types of ER:
- Rough Endoplasmic Reticulum (RER): Looks rough under an electron microscope because it has ribosomes attached to its surface. Mainly involved in protein synthesis and protein secretion (e.g., pancreatic cells).
- Smooth Endoplasmic Reticulum (SER): Does not have ribosomes on its surface, so it looks smooth. Involved in the synthesis and storage of fats and hormones.
Golgi apparatus โ The packaging and shipping centres
- The Golgi apparatus consists of stacks of flattened, sac-like structures (cisternae) โ it acts like the cell’s post office.
- It is functionally linked to the ER, cell membrane, and other organelles.
- The Golgi apparatus modifies, sorts, and packages proteins and/or lipids into vesicles for transport, secretion, or lysosome formation.
- It was first observed in 1898 by Italian scientist Camillo Golgi in the nerve cells of a barn owl using special staining techniques. Its existence was confirmed by electron microscopy decades later.
Fig. 2.13: Endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus โ pathway for protein processing and secretion
Lysosomes โ The clean-up system
- Lysosomes are single membrane-bound sacs filled with digestive enzymes.
- They break down unwanted proteins, carbohydrates, fats, and even damaged parts of the cell โ keeping it clean and healthy.
- Products formed by the breakdown are released into the cytoplasm where they may be reused in other cellular processes.
- Interesting fact: Human sperm cells contain lysosomal enzymes. When a sperm meets an egg, these enzymes help break down the outer layer of the egg, allowing fertilisation to take place.
๐ Questions โ ER, Golgi, Ribosomes, Lysosomes
LOTS: What is the difference between RER and SER?
Medium: Why is the Golgi apparatus compared to a post office?
HOTS: Lysosomes are sometimes called ‘suicide bags’ of the cell. Why?
HOTS: Describe the complete path of a protein from its site of synthesis to secretion outside the cell.
Mitochondria โ The powerhouse of the cell
- Mitochondria are called the ‘powerhouses of the cell’ because they supply the energy needed for most cellular activities.
- Each mitochondrion is surrounded by two membranes:
- Outer membrane: smooth and porous.
- Inner membrane: folded into finger-like projections called cristae, which increase the surface area for chemical reactions and facilitate energy production.
- In mitochondria, glucose and other molecules are broken down to release energy during cellular respiration.
- The energy released is stored in the form of ATP (Adenosine Triphosphate) โ which acts as the energy currency of the cell and is used for most cellular activities.
- Mitochondria have their own DNA and ribosomes โ they can make some of their own proteins. This suggests mitochondria share an evolutionary history with bacteria.
Fig. 2.14: Structure of a mitochondrion
๐ข Numerical Questions
1. A cell has 200 mitochondria and each produces 36 ATP per glucose molecule. How many total ATP molecules are produced when all mitochondria each process one glucose molecule?
2. The inner membrane surface area increases from 2 cmยฒ to 14 cmยฒ due to cristae. By what factor has the surface area increased? Why is this important?
๐ Questions
LOTS: Why are mitochondria called the powerhouses of the cell?
Medium: What is the role of cristae in a mitochondrion?
HOTS: Instead of many small mitochondria, why does a cell not have a single giant mitochondrion? How does this relate to surface area?
HOTS: What would happen to a eukaryotic cell if all its mitochondria were removed?
Plastids โ Centre for food synthesis in the plant cells and beyond
- Plants use special organelles called plastids for food synthesis and storage โ present only in plant cells.
- Chloroplasts โ a type of plastid โ contain the green pigment chlorophyll which absorbs sunlight for photosynthesis.
- Chloroplasts are double-membrane-bound organelles, like mitochondria.
- Inside the chloroplast is a semi-fluid substance called the stroma.
- Within the stroma are disc-shaped membrane structures (thylakoids) that contain chlorophyll โ light energy is absorbed by them during photosynthesis.
- The sugars synthesised in photosynthesis are stored in the stroma along with starch granules.
- Like mitochondria, plastids also have their own DNA and ribosomes โ suggesting a shared evolutionary history with bacteria.
Fig. 2.15: Structure of a chloroplast
How do flowers, fruits, and vegetables acquire varied colours?
- In flower petals and fruits, plastids contain pigments other than chlorophyll.
- These plastids are called chromoplasts (Greek: chroma = colour). Their pigments may be yellow, orange or red โ source of bright colours in flowers and fruits.
- Bright colours of chromoplasts help in attracting pollinators for pollination and fruit-eating animals that help in seed dispersal.
- Some plastids lack pigments and are colourless โ called leucoplasts (Greek: leukos = white).
- Leucoplasts store food material โ starch, oils, or proteins โ classified based on the type of food they store.
- Example: Leucoplasts in potato and taro (Colocasia) cells store starch.
๐ Questions โ Plastids
LOTS: Name the three types of plastids and state the function of each.
Medium: Do white flowers contain any pigment? Give reasons.
HOTS: Mitochondria and chloroplasts are believed to have evolved from ancient bacteria. What evidence supports this?
HOTS: A student says that plastids are only found in green parts of plants because only green parts perform photosynthesis. Is this correct?
Vacuoles โ The organelles for storage and support
- In a mature plant cell, there is usually one large central vacuole surrounded by a single selectively permeable membrane.
- The vacuole is filled with a watery fluid called cell sap.
- The vacuole stores water, minerals, sugars, and waste material.
- By storing large amounts of water, the vacuole helps maintain pressure (turgor pressure) inside the cell, which keeps a plant cell firm.
- When a plant does not get enough water, the vacuole loses water, the cells become less firm, and the plant wilts.
- In animal cells, vacuoles are sometimes present but are not as large as plant vacuoles. They help in the temporary storage of materials.
๐ Questions โ Vacuoles
LOTS: Why do plants look wilted when they do not get enough water?
Medium: Compare vacuoles in plant cells and animal cells.
HOTS: How does the large central vacuole of a plant cell help it survive in a dilute soil solution without bursting?
HOTS: A plant cell and an animal cell are both placed in pure water. What will happen to each and why?
2.4 How do Normal Cells Grow and Divide?
- When we get a cut on the skin, it heals because cells in our body can grow and divide to replace old, dead, or damaged cells.
- Growth happens not because cells get bigger โ cells can only grow up to a certain size โ but because cells divide to form new cells.
- Every day, an estimated hundreds of billions of cells in our body are replaced โ almost 1% of the total number of cells.
- Both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells divide, but eukaryotic cells divide in a more controlled and orderly manner by a process called the cell cycle.
๐ฌ Activity 2.5: Let us enhance our skills (Observing cell division in onion root tip)
- Take a jar and fill it with plain water. Place an onion bulb over the jar so that its base (bearing roots) is immersed in the water.
- Leave the setup for 5โ6 days and observe the growing roots. Cut 2โ3 cm of freshly grown roots.
- Transfer root tips to freshly prepared aceto-alcohol (glacial acetic acid : ethanol :: 1:3). Keep for 24 hours, then transfer to 70% ethanol for preservation.
- Take one or two preserved roots, wash in water and place on a clean slide.
- Put one drop of dilute Hydrochloric acid (HCl) on the root tips to soften the tissue. Rinse after 10โ15 minutes. Add 2โ3 drops of aceto-carmine stain.
- Leave the slide for 5โ10 minutes, then gently warm it (with caution) over a spirit lamp.
- Cut the tip portion of the root on the slide and put a coverslip. Gently squash with your thumb to spread the cells on the slide.
- Observe the slide under a microscope.
Observation: Cells of the growing root tip appear at different stages of cell division โ because they divide continuously. These different stages correspond to different phases of the cell cycle.
2.4.1 Cell division
- Cell division is the process by which new cells are formed from pre-existing cells.
- It allows living organisms to grow, repair damaged tissues, and reproduce.
- Some cells (e.g., skin cells) divide continuously to replace cells that are lost regularly.
- There are two major types of cell division: mitosis and meiosis.
- Mitosis is important for normal growth, repair, maintenance, and asexual reproduction.
- Meiosis is important for sexual reproduction and creation of genetic diversity.
Mitosis
- Every human begins life as a single fertilised egg. This one cell divides repeatedly by mitosis to form trillions of cells.
- Mitosis is the most common type of cell division.
- Mitosis produces two genetically identical daughter cells from one parent cell.
- Each daughter cell gets the same DNA and the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
- This ensures that genetic information is largely maintained across body cells.
Meiosis
- Meiosis is a type of cell division that produces gametes (sex cells) and occurs only in the cells of reproductive organs.
- Gametes produced by meiosis create variations and diversity among living organisms โ which is why children resemble parents but are not exactly the same.
- In animals (including humans): meiosis occurs in the testes (to produce sperm) and ovaries (to produce eggs).
- In plants: meiosis occurs in the anthers (male parts โ to form pollen grains/sperm cells) and ovaries (female parts โ to produce egg cells).
- In meiosis, the parent cell divides twice (one after the other) to form four daughter cells.
- During the first division: chromosomes are reduced to half in each daughter cell.
- The second division is similar to mitosis โ each daughter cell divides to form two, giving four daughter cells with half the number of chromosomes.
- Each gamete has half the number of DNA compared to the parent cell.
- During fertilisation, gametes from two individuals combine โ restoring the original chromosome number.
- Errors in mitosis: lead to uncontrolled cell divisions โ formation of tumours and abnormal chromosome numbers in body cells.
- Errors in meiosis: may result in genetic disorders, developmental problems, distinctive physical features, early pregnancy loss, or reduced fertility.
Fig. 2.18 & 2.19: Mitosis produces 2 identical daughter cells; Meiosis is a two-step process producing 4 gametes
๐ข Numerical Questions
1. A human body cell has 46 chromosomes. How many chromosomes will be in (a) each cell after mitosis? (b) each gamete after meiosis? (c) the zygote after fertilisation?
2. A single cell undergoes 5 rounds of mitosis. How many cells will be produced in total?
3. A plant cell with 24 chromosomes undergoes meiosis. How many chromosomes will each of the four daughter cells contain?
๐ Questions โ Cell Division
LOTS: What are the two major types of cell division and where does each occur?
Medium: What would happen if gametes were formed by mitotic divisions instead of meiosis?
HOTS: If the skin cells start dividing by meiosis instead of mitosis, what would happen to a cut on the skin?
HOTS: How does meiosis contribute to genetic diversity in a population?
2.5 Cell Theory โ The Unifying Principle of Biology
- In 1838, German botanist Matthias Schleiden reported that all plants are made up of cells.
- In 1839, German zoologist Theodor Schwann found that all animals are also made up of cells.
- In 1855, German scientist Rudolf Virchow expanded the Cell Theory by stating that new cells are formed only from pre-existing cells.
- Together, their work led to the formulation of the Cell Theory.
1. All living organisms are made up of one or more cells.
2. The cell is the basic unit of structure and function in living beings.
3. All cells arise from pre-existing cells.
This unifies all biology โ from bacteria to humans โ and explains life’s continuity through cell division.
2.5.1 Do cells grow and reproduce forever?
- Cells grow and divide in a controlled way, carry out their functions, and eventually die when they are no longer needed.
- Dead cells are replaced by new cells. Every cell has a definite lifespan.
- In many animal cells, cell division stops when cells come in contact with neighbouring cells โ this is called contact inhibition.
- Cancer cells lose this control and keep dividing uncontrollably, leading to the formation of tumours.
- Plant cells do not show contact inhibition because of their rigid cell walls โ they follow a different pattern of growth.
- Programmed Cell Death (PCD): a genetically regulated and organised process of selective cell destruction โ essential for normal development, cellular quality control, and immune function. Example: PCD helps form fingers in an embryo by eliminating cells between digits โ without it, we would have webbed hands.
๐ Questions โ Cell Theory
LOTS: State the three postulates of the Cell Theory.
Medium: What is contact inhibition? How does it prevent tumour formation?
HOTS: Which phenomenon inhibits the formation of tumours in the human body? Can plants also develop tumours? Explain.
HOTS: Rudolf Virchow’s contribution to Cell Theory was crucial. Why is the statement ‘all cells arise from pre-existing cells’ so important in biology?
๐งช Chapter Quiz โ 25 MCQs
Test your understanding with this 25-question quiz on Chapter 2: Cell โ The Building Block of Life. Answers are highlighted after each attempt.
