2.2 Types of Cells
2.2 Types of Cells
2.2 Types of Cells
TYPES OF CELLS
Content Statements:
A2.2.5 Prokaryote cell structure
A2.2.6 Eukaryote cell structure
A2.2.8 Differences in eukaryo9c cell structure between animals, fungi and plants
A2.2.10 Cell types and cell structures viewed in light and electron micrographs
A2.2.11 Drawing and annota9on based on electron micrographs
B2.2.1 Organelles as discrete subunits of cells that are adapted to perform specific func9ons
B2.2.2 Advantage of the separa9on of the nucleus and cytoplasm into separate compartments
B2.2.3 Advantages of compartmentalisa9on in the cytoplasm of cells
TYPES OF CELLS
Cells can be categorised into either of two main groups:
Prokaryotes:
• Usually unicellular and lack compartmentalisation
• Do not possess a nucleus or membrane bound organelles
• DNA is circular, unpackaged (naked) and usually lacks introns
• Cells are smaller in size (~1–5µm) and contain 70S ribosomes
Eukaryotes:
• Have compartmentalised structures and may be multicellular
• Possess a nucleus and numerous membrane bound organelles
• DNA is linear, packaged with histone proteins and contain introns
• Cells are larger in size (~10–100µm) and contain 80S ribosomes Eukaryo(c vs Prokaryo(c Cell
PROKARYOTIC CLASSIFICATION
Prokaryotes are typically unicellular organisms that are classified into two dis9nct domains:
• Bacteria: A diverse domain that includes all traditional bacterial species (including all pathogenic forms)
• Archaea: Includes most extremophiles (found in adverse environments – like high temperatures)
Bacterial species can be further categorised according to a variety of structural or func9onal condi9ons;
including shape (spheres vs rods vs spirals vs other), nutri@onal paBerns (autotrophic vs heterotrophic),
gaseous requirements (anaerobic vs aerobic) and cell wall composi@on (Gram nega7ve vs Gram posi7ve)
Flagella
Cytoplasm
Ribosomes (70S)
Pili
Slime Capsule (glycocalyx)
PROKARYOTE MICROGRAPHS
Prokaryo@c Cell Micrographs: 1 = Nucleoid ; 2 = Sex Pili (Conjuga7on) ; 3 = Cell Wall ; 4 = Flagella
ENDOSYMBIOSIS
Eukaryo9c cells are believed to have evolved from prokaryo9c cells via the theory of endosymbiosis.
According to this theory, an early bacterium was engulfed by another prokaryote via phagocytosis, but the
engulfed cell remained undigested and contributed new func@onality to the cell. Over 9me, the engulfed
cell lost some of its independent u9lity and became an organelle (e.g. chloroplast or mitochondrion).
EUKARYOTIC CLASSIFICATION
Eukaryotes are organisms whose cells contain a nucleus and belong to the domain Eukarya. They may be
unicellular or mul9cellular, and their cells are compartmentalised by membrane-bound organelles.
Eukaryo9c organisms can be divided into four dis9nct kingdoms:
• Protists: Includes various unicellular organisms and multicellular organisms that lack specialised tissue
• Fungi: Have cell walls made of chitin and obtain nutrition via heterotrophic absorption (decomposers)
• Plants: Have cell walls made of cellulose and obtain nutrition autotrophically via photosynthesis
• Animals: Lack a cell wall and obtain nutrition via heterotrophic ingestion (consumers)
EUKARYOTIC KINGDOMS
nucleus cytosol
nucleolus
rough ER cytoskeleton
peroxisome
mitochondrion
Golgi body
nucleus
mitochondrion
endoplasmic
re9culum vacuole
EUKARYOTE COMPARISONS
The cells of animals, plants and fungi all share certain key features as a consequence of being eukaryo9c:
• They all have a double-membrane nucleus to separate the activities of transcription and translation
• They all have organelles that maintain an internal chemistry allowing for specific chemical processes
The three types of eukaryo9c cells also differ in several key respects:
• The cell wall is made of cellulose in plant cells and chitin in fungal cells (animal cells lack a cell wall)
• Plant cells possess chloroplast (to photosynthesise) while animal cells have cilia and flagella (motility)
• Plant and fungal cells possess permanent vacuoles (large and central in plants) – animal cells do not
EUKARYOTE MICROGRAPHS