Cell Theory in Timeline
Cell Theory in Timeline
• Cell discovery began in the 1600s when a Dutch shopkeeper, Antony van
Leeuwenhoek, discovered simple lenses and used them to visualize single-celled
organisms, which he collectively termed ‘animalcules.’
• In 1665, an English scientist, Robert Hooke, observed a thin slice of cork under a
microscope and published his observation in the book ‘Micrographia.’ He noticed
small, box-like structures resembling the cells of a monastery and coined the term ‘cell.’
However, Hooke’s observations were limited to dead plant material, and he could not
fully comprehend the significance of what he had seen.
• In the early 19th century, Matthias Schleiden, a German botanist, studied plant
tissues and proposed that all plants are composed of cells. He postulated that cells
were the fundamental building blocks of plants, responsible for their growth and
development. Schleiden’s work laid the foundation for the idea that cells play a vital role
in the structure and function of living organisms.
• Around the same time, Theodor Schwann, a German physiologist, conducted extensive
studies on animal tissues. He observed that animal tissues were also composed of
cells, similar to what Schleiden had discovered in plants. Schwann concluded that all
living organisms, plants, and animals, were made up of cells. This realization was a
crucial step toward the formulation of the cell theory.
The image below shows a detailed timeline that led to the discovery of cell and the cell theory:
The Three Parts of the Cell Theory
According to the conclusions made by Schleiden and Schwann in 1838, it was proposed that:
2. The cell is the structural and functional unit of all living things.
However, Schleiden’s theory of spontaneous cell formation was later disapproved by Rudolf
Virchow in 1855. He instead stated, ‘Omnis cellula e cellula,’ meaning ‘All cells only arise from
pre-existing cells.’ which is included as the third part of the cell theory.
Thus, combining the contributions of Schleiden, Schwann, and Virchow, the traditional cell
theory has three tenets. It states that:
1. All organisms are composed of one or more cells
2. The cell is the structural and functional unit of all living things
Cell Theory
Since the formation of classical cell theory, further studies on cells with the advancement of
microscope have led to the formation of the modern cell theory, which has three main
additions:
• Genetic material (DNA) is passed on from one cell to another during cell division
The cell theory has transformed our understanding of biology by recognizing the cell as the
fundamental unit of life. It continues to shape scientific progress in numerous fields.