Cell Biology: Science Explorer - Cells and Heredity
Cell Biology: Science Explorer - Cells and Heredity
A simple light
microscope contains
only one lens.
Compound Microscope
A light microscope
that has more than
one lens is called a
compound
microscope.
Cells
A lens that
magnifies is
thicker in the
center than at
the edges and
is called a
convex lens.
Compound Microscope
Magnification
Because a
compound
microscope uses
more than one
lens, it can magnify
an object more
than a simple
microscope.
Compound Microscope
Magnification
The total
magnification of
a compound
microscope is
equal to the
magnifications
of the two
lenses
multiplied
together.
Resolution
The ability to clearly
distinguish the
individual parts of an
object is called
resolution.
Resolution is another
term for the
sharpness of an
image.
Electron Microscopes
Since the 1930s,
scientists have
developed different
types of electron
microscopes,
which use a beam
of electrons instead
of light to examine
a specimen.
Electron Microscopes
Because they use
tiny electrons to
produce images,
the resolution of
electron
microscopes is
much better than
the resolution of
light microscopes.
END – 1.1
Science Explorer
Cells and Heredity
Active Transport
Diffusion & Osmosis
Passive & Active Transport
Passive Transport
Objectives
1. By what three methods do materials
move into and out of cells?
2. What is the difference between
passive transport and active transport?
Cell Membrane
The cell membrane is selectively
permeable, which means that some
substances can pass through it while
others cannot.
Cell Membrane
The collisions
cause the
molecules to push
away from one
another and spread
out.
Diffusion
Molecules diffuse
through the cell
membrane into a
cell when there is a
higher
concentration of
the molecules
outside the cell
than inside the cell.
Osmosis
The diffusion of
water molecules
through a
selectively
permeable
membrane is called
osmosis.
Osmosis
Osmosis is
important to cells
because cells
cannot function
properly without
adequate water.
In osmosis, water
molecules move
from an area where
they are highly
concentrated
through the cell
membrane to an
area where they
are less
concentrated.
Passive Transport
The movement of
materials through a
cell membrane
without using
energy is called
passive transport.
Diffusion and osmosis are both types of
passive transport.
Active Transport
When a cell needs
to take in materials
that are in higher
concentration
inside the cell than
outside the cell, the
movement of the
materials requires
energy.
Active Transport
Active transport is
the movement of
materials through a
cell membrane
using energy.
Active Transport
The main
difference between
passive transport
and active
transport is that
active transport
requires the cell to
use energy while
passive transport
does not.
Active Transport
A cell has several
ways of moving
materials by active
transport.
Active Transport
In one method,
transport proteins
in the cell
membrane “pick
up” molecules
outside the cell and
carry them in,
using energy in the
process.
Active Transport
Another method of
active transport is
engulfing, in which
the cell membrane
surrounds, or
engulfs, a particle.
Active Transport
The cell must use
energy in this
process as well.
Cell Size
Most cells are very
small.
Cell Size
One reason is
related to the fact
that all materials
move into and out
of cells through the
cell membrane.
Cell Size
Once a molecule
enters a cell, it is
carried to its
destination by a
stream of moving
cytoplasm.
Cell Size
In a very large
cell, streams of
cytoplasm must
travel farther to
carry materials
from the cell
membrane to
all parts of the
cell.
Cell Size
When a cell reaches a certain size, it divides
into two new cells.
END – 1.4
Science Explorer
Cells and Heredity
2.1 - PHOTOSYNTHESIS
2.1 - Photosynthesis - Related Video
Calvin Cycle
Photosynthesis
Objectives
1. What happens during the process of
photosynthesis?
2. How does the sun supply living
things with the energy they need?
Photosynthesis
The sun
provides
almost all the
energy used
by living things
on Earth.
Photosynthesis
All cells need
energy to carry out
their functions.
Photosynthesis
The process by
which a cell
captures the
energy in
sunlight and
uses it to make
food is called
photosynthesis
.
Photosynthesis
During
photosynthesis,
plants and some
other organisms
use energy from
the sun to convert
carbon dioxide and
water into oxygen
and sugars,
including glucose.
Photosynthesis
You can think of photosynthesis as taking
place in two stages.
Photosynthesis – 1st Stage
The first stage of
photosynthesis
involves
capturing the
energy in
sunlight.
Photosynthesis – 1st Stage
In plants, this
energy-capturing
process occurs in
the leaves and
other green parts
of the plant.
Pigments
The chloroplasts in
plant cells give
plants their green
color. The green
color comes from
pigments, colored
chemical
compounds that
absorb light.
Chlorophyll
The main pigment
found in the
chloroplasts of
plants is
chlorophyll.
The pigments
capture light
energy and use it
to power the
second stage of
photosynthesis.
Photosynthesis – 2nd Stage
In the second
stage of
photosynthesis, the
cell uses the
captured energy to
produce sugars.
Photosynthesis – 2nd Stage
The cell needs two
raw materials for
this stage: water
(H2O) and carbon
dioxide (CO2).
Photosynthesis – 2nd Stage
In plants, the roots
absorb water from
the soil.
Carbon dioxide
enters the plant
through small
openings on the
undersides of the
leaves called
stomata.
Photosynthesis – 2nd Stage
The events of photosynthesis can be summed
up in a chemical equation.
Photosynthesis – 2nd Stage
The raw materials—six molecules of carbon
dioxide and six molecules of water—are on
the left side of the equation.
Photosynthesis – 2nd Stage
The products— one molecule of glucose and
six molecules of oxygen—are on the right
side of the equation.
Photosynthesis – 2nd Stage
An arrow connects the raw materials to the
products.
Photosynthesis – 2nd Stage
Light energy, which is necessary for the chemical
reaction to occur, is written above the arrow.
Autotrophs
A plant is an
autotroph, an
organism that
makes its own
food.
The plant’s leaves
contain sugars
made during
photosynthesis.
Heterotroph
A caterpillar is a
heterotroph, an
organism that
cannot make its
own food.
To live, grow, and
perform other
functions, the
caterpillar needs
the energy in plant
sugars.
By eating
plants,
heterotrophs get
energy from the
sun in an
indirect way.
Nearly all living
things obtain
energy either
directly or indirectly
from the energy of
sunlight captured
during
photosynthesis.
Oxygen in the Atmosphere
Photosynthesis
also is
essential for
the air you
breathe.
Oxygen in the Atmosphere
Almost all the oxygen in Earth’s atmosphere
was produced by living things through the
process of photosynthesis.
END – 2.1
Science Explorer
Cells and Heredity
2.2 - RESPIRATION
2.2 - Respiration – Related Video
Cell Cycle
Cell Division
Cells From Other Cells
In Cell Division – The Mitosis Song
Objectives
1. What events take place during the
three stages of the cell cycle?
2. What is the role of DNA
replication?
Cell Cycle
The regular
sequence of
growth and
division that
cells undergo is
known as the
cell cycle.
The cell cycle is
divided into
three main
stages.
1st Stage - Interphase
During interphase,
the cell grows to its
mature size,makes
a copy of its DNA,
and prepares to
divide into two
cells.
During the first part
of interphase, the
cell doubles in size
and produces all
the structures
needed to carry out
its functions.
Replication
After a cell has
grown to its
mature size, the
cell makes a
copy of the DNA
in its nucleus in
a process called
replication.
At the end of DNA
replication, the cell
contains two
identical sets of
DNA.
2nd Stage - Mitosis
Once interphase is
complete, the
second stage of
the cell cycle
begins.
Mitosis is the stage
during which the
cell’s nucleus divides
into two new nuclei.
During mitosis,
one copy of the
DNA is distributed
into each of the two
daughter cells.
Mitosis Phases
Scientists divide
mitosis into four
parts, or phases:
prophase,
metaphase,
anaphase, and
telophase.
Prophase
During prophase,
the threadlike
chromatin in the
cell’s nucleus
begins to condense
into tiny rods.
Chromosome
Scientists call each
doubled rod of
condensed
chromatin a
chromosome.
Chromatid
Each identical rod,
or strand, of the
chromosome is
called a chromatid
Centromere
The two strands
are held together
by a structure
called a
centromere.
As the cell
progresses through
metaphase,
anaphase, and
telophase, the
chromatids
separate from each
other and move to
opposite ends of
the cell.
Then two nuclei form around the chromatids
at the two ends of the cell.
3rd Stage - Cytokinesis
After mitosis, the
final stage of the
cell cycle, called
cytokinesis,
completes the
process of cell
division.
During cytokinesis, the cytoplasm divides,
distributing the organelles into each of the
two new cells.
Each daughter cell
has the same
number of
chromosomes as
the original parent
cell.
At the end of
cytokinesis, each
cell enters
interphase, and the
cycle begins again.
How long it takes
a cell to go
through one cell
cycle depends
on the type of
cell. The length
of each stage in
the cell cycle
also varies.
A cell makes a copy
of its DNA before
mitosis occurs.
DNA replication
ensures that each
daughter cell will
have all of the
genetic information
it needs to carry
out its activities.
The two sides of
the DNA ladder are
made up of
alternating sugar
and phosphate
molecules.
Each rung of the DNA ladder is made up
of a pair of molecules called nitrogen
bases.
Nitrogen Bases - ATGC
2.4 - CANCER
2.4 - Cancer - Related Video
3D Medical Animation – What is Cancer?
Cancer Cells vs Healthy Cells
Cancer Growth Animation
DNA Mutation
Gene Mutation
Mitosis in Cancer
Objectives
1. How is cancer related to the cell cycle?
2. What are some ways that cancer can
be treated?
Cancer is a
disease in which
cells grow and
divide
uncontrollably,
damaging the parts
of the body around
them.
There are more than 100 types of cancer.
Cancer can occur in almost any part of the
body.
Cancers are often named by the place in the
body where they begin.
In the United
States today,
lung cancer is
the leading
cause of
cancer deaths
among both
men and
women.
Scientists think that
cancer begins
when something
damages a portion
of the DNA in a
chromosome.
The damage
causes a change in
the DNA called a
mutation. Cancer
begins when
mutations disrupt
the normal cell
cycle, causing cells
to divide in an
uncontrolled way.
Without the
normal
controls on the
cell cycle, the
cells grow too
large and
divide too
often.
As the cell divides, more and more
abnormal cells like it grow near it.
In time, these cells
form a tumor.
A tumor is a mass
of abnormal cells
that develops when
cancerous cells
divide and grow
uncontrollably.
Some of the
cancerous cells
may break off the
tumor and enter
the bloodstream.
In this way, the
cancer can spread
to other areas of
the body.
Doctors usually
treat cancer in one
or more of three
ways: surgery,
radiation, or drugs
that destroy the
cancer cells.
When a cancer is
detected before it
has spread to other
parts of the body,
surgery is usually
the best treatment.
If doctors can completely remove the
cancerous tumor, a person may be cured
of the disease.
If, however, the
cancer has spread
or the tumor cannot
be removed,
doctors may use
radiation.
Fast growing
cancer cells are
more likely than
normal cells to be
destroyed by
radiation.
Chemotherapy is
the use of drugs to
kill cancer cells.
It is effective
because the drugs
spread throughout
the body, killing
cancer cells or
slowing their growth.
Unfortunately, none
of these cancer
treatments is
perfect.
Most have
unpleasant, or
even dangerous,
side effects.
Scientists continue
to look for new
ways to treat
cancer.
Scientists estimate
that almost two
thirds of all cancer
deaths are caused
either by tobacco
use or unhealthful
diets.
Smoking is the main cause of lung
cancer.
Unhealthful diets
may lead to almost
as many cancer
deaths as does
tobacco.
A diet that is low in
fat and includes a lot
of fruits, vegetables,
and grain products
can help lower a
person’s risk of
some types of
cancer.
END 2.4