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Syllabus /School /Class 8 /biology /Cell Structure

Cell Structure

Cell — Structure and Functions

What you'll learn

  • What a cell is; who discovered it.
  • The main parts of a cell and their functions.
  • Plant cell vs animal cell — differences.
  • How cells are organised into tissues, organs, organ systems.

Key concepts

The cell — basics

  • Cell: smallest living unit capable of carrying out all life processes.
  • Discovered by Robert Hooke (1665) — observed cork cells; coined the word "cell."
  • Cell theory (Schleiden, Schwann, Virchow):
    1. All living things are made of cells.
    2. Cell is the basic unit of life.
    3. All cells arise from pre-existing cells.
  • Unicellular organisms: one cell does everything (Amoeba, Paramecium, bacteria, yeast).
  • Multicellular organisms: many specialised cells (humans have ~37 trillion cells).

Parts of a cell

Cell membrane (Plasma membrane)

  • Present in all cells (plant and animal).
  • Thin, flexible, semi-permeable (selectively permeable) barrier.
  • Controls what enters and exits the cell.
  • Made of lipids and proteins.

Cell wall (plants only)

  • Outside the cell membrane in plant cells.
  • Made of cellulose — rigid, tough.
  • Provides structural support and protection.
  • Fully permeable (lets everything through; plasma membrane does the selective job).
  • Absent in animal cells.

Cytoplasm

  • Jelly-like fluid filling the cell between membrane and nucleus.
  • Contains water, salts, dissolved nutrients, enzymes.
  • All organelles are suspended in the cytoplasm.
  • Site of many chemical reactions.

Nucleus

  • Control centre of the cell — directs all activities.
  • Bounded by nuclear membrane (double layer with pores).
  • Contains chromosomes (made of DNA) — carries genetic information (hereditary instructions).
  • Nucleolus: dense region inside nucleus; makes ribosomes.
  • Most cells have one nucleus; mature red blood cells have none; some muscle cells have many.

Mitochondria

  • Rod-shaped organelles; "powerhouse of the cell".
  • Release energy from food through cellular respiration:

    Glucose + Oxygen → Carbon dioxide + Water + Energy (ATP)

  • Have their own DNA — evidence they were once free-living bacteria (endosymbiosis).
  • More mitochondria in cells that need more energy: muscle cells, liver cells.

Chloroplasts (plant cells only)

  • Green organelles containing chlorophyll (green pigment).
  • Site of photosynthesis.
  • Like mitochondria, have their own DNA.
  • Give plants their green colour.

Vacuoles

Cell typeVacuoles
Plant cellsOne large central vacuole — stores water, sap, waste; provides rigidity (turgor pressure)
Animal cellsMany small, temporary vacuoles
Unicellular organismsContractile vacuole (Amoeba) — expels excess water; food vacuole — digestion

Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER)

  • Network of membranes connecting nucleus to cell membrane.
  • Rough ER: has ribosomes attached; makes proteins.
  • Smooth ER: no ribosomes; makes lipids, detoxifies chemicals.

Ribosomes

  • Tiny granules; no membrane.
  • Site of protein synthesis.
  • Found in all cells (prokaryotic too).

Golgi Apparatus

  • Stack of flattened membrane sacs.
  • Packages and ships proteins made by rough ER → to where they are needed.
  • Makes lysosomes.

Lysosomes

  • Contain digestive enzymes.
  • Break down worn-out organelles, bacteria, food particles.
  • "Suicide bags" — if ruptured, digest the whole cell (autolysis) — occurs during cell death.
  • Mainly in animal cells.

Plant cell vs Animal cell

FeaturePlant CellAnimal Cell
Cell wallPresent (cellulose)Absent
ChloroplastsPresent (photosynthesis)Absent
Large central vacuolePresentAbsent
LysosomesRarely presentCommon
ShapeRegular, fixedIrregular
CentriolesAbsentPresent (for cell division)

Organisation of cells

Cells do not work alone in multicellular organisms. They are organised:

Cell → Tissue → Organ → Organ System → Organism

LevelExample
CellMuscle cell, nerve cell, blood cell
TissueMuscle tissue (many muscle cells together)
OrganHeart (muscle tissue + nerve tissue + blood vessels)
Organ systemCirculatory system (heart + blood vessels + blood)
OrganismHuman being

Cell division

  • Cells reproduce by division to:
    • Allow growth.
    • Replace old/dead cells.
    • Repair damaged tissue.
  • Mitosis: produces 2 identical daughter cells (same chromosome number) — growth and repair.
  • Meiosis: produces 4 daughter cells with half chromosomes — makes sex cells (sperm, egg).

Quick check

  • Who discovered cells? What did he observe?
  • What is the function of the nucleus?
  • Name three differences between plant and animal cells.
  • Why is the mitochondrion called the powerhouse of the cell?
  • Arrange in order from smallest to largest: organ, cell, organ system, tissue, organism.

Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Cell Structure.

4 topics • Notes • Practice • AI explanations available

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