Welcome to Cell Biology!

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Welcome to Cell Biology!. it's alive!. Cell Theory. 2.1: Outline the Cell Theory 2.1.2: Discuss the Evidence for Cell Theory. Cell Theory. Living organisms are composed of cells Cells are the smallest unit of life - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Welcome to Cell Biology!

• it's alive!

Cell Theory

• 2.1: Outline the Cell Theory• 2.1.2: Discuss the Evidence for Cell Theory

Cell Theory

1. Living organisms are composed of cells2. Cells are the smallest unit of life3. Cells come from pre-existing cells, by division

(so that new cells cannot be constructed from non living substance)

The History of Cell Theory

Let’s meet who discovered cells…Meet the Scientists...

1. All living things are made of cells…

Digestive Tissue Goblet Cells http://www.olympusmicro.com/galleries/abramowitz/index.html 6.11.12

How do we know that all living things are made of cells?

Because we can SEE them through microscopes….

When we we first start talking about ‘Cells’?

Robert Hooke coined the term ‘cells’ since he felt that the space-filled chambers of dead cork resembled a monk’s empty cell…

Cell Theory: Robert HookeMicrographia, 1665:

. . . I could exceedingly plainly perceive it to be all perforated

and porous, much like a Honey-comb, but that the pores of it

were not regular. . . . these pores, or cells, . . . were indeed the first microscopical pores I ever saw,

and perhaps, that were ever seen, for I had not met with any Writer

or Person, that had made any mention of them before this. . .

The Father of Microscopy: Van Leeuwenhoek

The first man to visualise single-celled animals (he called protists animacules): 1674Microscopy bytes

Nothing smaller can survive independently

If a cell is broken down into its individual components, its

subunits cannot survive independently

3.All cells come from pre-existing cells: ‘Omnis Cellula e cellula ‘

• Disproving spontaneous generation

• Pasteur

Limitations to cell theory

Limitations to cell theory: multinucleated cells (syncytiae)

• Skeletal and cardiac muscle

Limitations to cell theory: multinucleated cells (syncytiae)

Fungal hyphae (phase contrast microscopy)

Cell Biology: Magnification and Illumination

Or…how to win a Nobel prize….

Cell Biology: Magnification and Illumination

• Let's take a look at the secret life inside our cells...

IB Cell Theory 2.1.4

‘Compare the relative sizes of molecules, cell membrane thickness, viruses, bacteria,

organelles and cells, using the appropriate SI unit.’

How large are cells?

Let's put things into perspective....

What units do we use to measure cells and cell components?

Size is relative….

Organism Size

Prokaryotic cell 1 – 10 μm

Animal Cell 10 – 30 μm

Plant Cell 10 – 100 μm

Virus < 100 ηm

DNA molecule 2 ηm

Phospholipid membrane 10 ηm

Is magnification all that matters?Magnification versus Resolution

• Is there a limit to magnification?• Does magnification improve resolution?• Resolution of a microscope is its ability to separate small

objects which are cose together• Resolution is determined by light/(electron) wavelength;

the shorter the wavelength, the higher the resolution• Light microscope resolution is 0.2 μm• Electron microscope resolution is 1 ηm• Scanning Tunnel microscope resolution is 0.01 ηm length

0.01 ηm depth

Light microscope: Magnification

Normal maximum magnifications of

ocular and objective lenses are 10X and 100X respectively,

giving overall maximal

magnification of X 1000

How do microscopes work (I)?

• Anatomy of vision

How do microscopes work (2)?• Objective lens (high powered magnifying glass)• Very short focal length (very close to the specimen)• Inverted image at high magnification• Second weak lens (eyepiece) produces a real image

Why do modern microscope images look so beautiful?

Modern Illumination techniques used in light microscopy

These techniques modify the light path to generate improved contrast:• Phase contrast micrcoscopy• Cross-polarised light microscopy• Dark field microscopy• Fluorescent microscopy

Phase shift in-vivo

Phase contrast microscopy

Phase contrast microscopy• Improved contrast,

allowing identification of structures in living cells

• Allowed us to understand cell division

• Won its inventor, Franz Zernike, the NOBEL PRIZE in 1951

• Nobel Prize link to Phase microscope:

• Phase Nobel

Contrast Microscopy

• Fluorescence contrast techniques

• Immunofluorescence techniques

• Here is a whole gallery of beautiful images:

• Fluorescence Gallery• Cell fluorescence

Electron Microscopy!• Follows the same

principles as light microscopy, but shines a beam of electrons rather than light particles

• The lower ‘wavelength’ of the electron beam allows incredible resolution

• Can visualise particles to the order of a few angstom (10-10m)

Transmission Electron Microscopy

• Image gallery • Designed by Ernst Ruska (Heidelberg) in 1938

• He won the Nobel Prize just before his death, in 1986

• First electron microscope was built in Toronto in 1938

Scanning Electron Microscope

• a tour of the scanning electron microscope

IB 2.1.5

Calculate the linear magnification of drawings and the actual size of specimens in images of

known magnification

Magnification and scale bars

• You will often need to calculate the actual size of a specimen/ component of a cell from a microscope image, or a photograph/micrograph

• The first step is to ensure that all parts of your calculation have the same units!!

Magnification = size of imageactual size of

specimen

Calculating size/ Magnification

Graticules can be used to help estimate organelle/

sample size

Calculating size/ Magnification: Worked examples

On Monday, we will learn about:1. What limits cell size?

2. Why and how do cells ‘specialise’?3. What are stem cells and why are they

controversial?

How to win a nobel prize....

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