Class 9 Chapter 5 - Fundamental Unit of Life
Class 9 Chapter 5 - Fundamental Unit of Life
Life
Cells are the basic structural and functional unit of living organisms. Cell biology is a branch
of biology that deals with the study of cells in all respects of its structure and function.
1.0Discovery of cell
Robert Hooke (1665) observed a dead cell which resembled honeycomb-like
structures in cork (comes from bark of tree). He called these boxes ' cells'. He
published what he observed under his self designed microscope in his book
'Micrographia'.
Anton Van Leeuwenhoek (1674) was the first to observe living cells in pond water.
Dujardin (1835) discovered a living semi fluid substance of cells and named Sarcode.
J. E. Purkinje (1839) used the term protoplasm for sarcode. It is living matter present
inside the cell. (vi) Huxley (1868) called protoplasm "The physical basis of life".
Rudolf Virchow (1855) – German pathologist established that all cells arise from pre
existing cells (“omnis cellula e cellula”).
2.0Cell Theory
The "cell theory" was formulated by two biologists, M.J.Schleiden (1838), and
T.Schwann (1839).
According to them, the cell is the structural and functional unit of all living beings.
The cell theory was further expanded by Virchow.
Bodies of the living beings are made up of cells. The cell is the basic unit of life.
All living cells have a plasma membrane that encloses their contents.
It is flexible and made up of organic molecules called lipids, proteins and small
fraction of carbohydrates.
Flexibility enables the cell to engulf in food and other materials (endocytosis). e.g.
Amoeba. It serves as a semi permeable or selectively permeable barrier to the outside
environment.
Small molecules such as oxygen, carbon dioxide, and water are able to pass freely
across the membrane but the passage of larger molecules, such as amino acids and
sugars, is carefully regulated.
It allows materials to enter and leave the cell through the tiny holes called pores.
Cell Wall
It is the outermost rigid, freely permeable layer found outside the plasma membrane
in all the plant cells, bacteria, blue-green algae, some protists and all fungi.
Cell walls permit the cells of plants, fungi and bacteria to withstand very dilute
(hypotonic) external media without bursting.
Cell wall of plant cells is formed of a fibrous polysaccharide called cellulose, while it
is formed of peptidoglycan in bacteria and blue-green algae.
Nuclear sap/Nucleoplasm/Karyolymph.
Nucleolus.
Chromatin threads.
Functions of nucleus
It brings about growth of the cell by directing the synthesis of structural proteins.
Cytoplasm
The fluid content/protoplasmic mass of the cell inner to plasma membrane and
excluding nucleus is called cytoplasm.
Cytosol forms the aqueous, nearly transparent, structureless ground substance inside
the cell.
Cell organelles are subcellular structures which have characteristic form, structure
and function where certain processes are localized in eukaryotes.
4.0Cell organelles
Endoplasmic Reticulum
The ER works closely with the Golgi apparatus and ribosomes. It creates a network of
membranes found through the whole cell.
The ER may also look different from cell to cell, depending on the cell's function.
Discovered by Camillo Golgi (1898) in nerve cells of owls. Golgi carried out a
revolutionary method of staining individual nerve and cell structures.
Position : It is located near the nucleus. Golgi bodies are pleomorphic structures,
because components of the golgi body are different in structure & shape in different
cells.
The purpose of the lysosome is to keep the cell clean by digesting any foreign
materials as well as worn-out cell organelles.
They might be used to digest food or break down the cell when it dies.
The outer membrane is smooth and has porous proteins which form channels for the
passage of molecules through it.
The cristae greatly increases the inner surface area of the mitochondria to hold a
variety of enzymes.
Cristae bears minute, regularly spaced tennis racket shaped particles known as F1
particles or oxysomes.
Oxysomes are concerned with ATP synthesis. Matrix contain various respiratory
enzymes.
Plastids
Plastids are major organelles found in the cells of plants and algae.
Plastids are the site of manufacture and storage of important chemical compounds
used by the cell.
Plastids often contain pigments used in photosynthesis and the types of pigments
present can change or determine the cell's color.
They contain enzymes and coenzymes necessary for the process of photosynthesis.
Plastids are of three types-
Chromoplasts - For pigment synthesis and storage. Chromoplasts are red, yellow and
orange in color and are found in petals of flowers and in fruits. Their color is due to
two pigments, carotene and xanthophyll.
Leucoplasts - Leucoplasts are colorless or white plastid. They occur in plant cells not
exposed to light, such as roots and seeds. Leucoplasts are the center of starch grain
formation and they are also involved in the synthesis of oil and proteins.
Chloroplasts - Chloroplasts are probably the most important among the plastids
since they are directly involved in photosynthesis. They are usually situated near the
surface of the cell and occur in those parts that receive sufficient light. e.g. the
palisade cells of leaves. The green color of chloroplasts is caused by the green
pigment chlorophyll.
Vacuoles
Vacuoles are storage sacs found within cells, and in plant cells, they can take up a
significant portion of the cell's volume.
They store nutrients and help maintain the cell's shape by providing rigidity and
turgor.
Ribosomes
Ribosomes are the protein builders or the protein synthesizers of the cell.
These proteins might be used as enzymes or as support for other cell functions.
Ribosomes are found in many places around the cell.
They are floating in the cytoplasm. Those floating ribosomes make proteins that will
be used inside the cell. Other ribosomes are found on the endoplasmic reticulum
(rough endoplasmic reticulum).
These attached ribosomes make proteins that will be used inside the cell and for
export out of the cell. The 60-S and 40-S model works fine for eukaryotic cells.
5.0Cell Division
Cells are structural and functional units that carry out respiration, nutrition, and waste
disposal.
Cell division, the process of replicating, is crucial for growth, tissue repair, and
reproduction.
In most cells, division occurs through Mitosis, producing two identical daughter cells.
In reproductive cells, division occurs through Meiosis, producing cells with half the
genetic material necessary for reproduction.