Knowing how cells work is critical in the genetics field. All living things consist of one or both of two cell types: prokaryotes and eukaryotes. The basic biologies of prokaryotes and eukaryotes are similar but not identical, so understanding the differences and similarities between them is important.
The process of passing genetic material from one generation to the next depends completely on how cells grow and divide. To reproduce, a simple organism such as bacteria or yeast simply copies its DNA (through a process called replication) and splits in two. But organisms that reproduce sexually go through a complicated dance that includes mixing and matching strands of DNA (a process called recombination) and then reducing the amount of DNA in special sex cells to arrive at completely new genetic combinations for their offspring.
There are two basic kinds of organisms - ones with a nucleus and those without a nucleus (a compartment filled with DNA surrounded by a membrane called a nuclear envelope):
All bacteria, regardless of temperament, are simple, one-celled prokaryotic organisms. None have cell nuclei, and all are small cells with relatively small amounts of DNA.
The exterior of a prokaryotic cell is encapsulated by a cell wall that serves as the bacteria's only protection from the outside world. A plasma membrane (membranes are thin sheets or layers) regulates the exchange of nutrients, water, and gases that nourish the bacterial cell. DNA, usually in the form of a single hoop-shaped piece (segments of DNA like this one are calledchromosomes), floats around inside the cell. The liquid interior of the cell is called thecytoplasm. The cytoplasm provides a cushiony, watery home for the DNA and other cell machinery that carries out the business of living. Prokaryotes divide, and thus reproduce, by simple mitosis.
Eukaryotes: Cells with a nucleusOrganisms that have cells with nuclei are classified as eukaryotes (meaning "true nucleus"). Eukaryotes range in complexity from simple one-celled animals and plants all the way to complex multicellular organisms like you. Eukaryotic cells are fairly complicated and have numerous parts to keep track of. Like prokaryotes, eukaryotic cells are held together by aplasma membrane, and sometimes a cell wall surrounds the membrane (plants, for example have cell walls). But that's where the similarities end.The most important feature of the eukaryotic cell is the nucleus - the membrane-surrounded compartment that houses the DNA that's divided into one or more chromosomes. The nucleus protects the DNA from damage during day-to-day living. Eukaryotic chromosomes are usually long, string-like segments of DNA instead of the hoop-shaped ones found in prokaryotes. Another hallmark of eukaryotes is the way the DNA is packaged: Eukaryotes usually have much larger amounts of DNA than prokaryotes, so to fit all that DNA into the tiny cell nucleus, it must be tightly wound around special proteins.
Unlike prokaryotes, eukaryotes have all sorts of cell parts, called organelles, that help carry out the business of living. The organelles are found floating around in the watery cytoplasm outside the nucleus.
Two of the most important organelles are the following:
Eukaryotic cells are able to carry out behaviors that prokaryotes can't. For example, one-celled eukaryotes often have appendages, such as long tails (called flagella) or hair-like projections (called cilia) that work like hundreds of tiny paddles, to help them move around. Also, only eukaryotic cells are capable of ingesting fluids and particles for nutrition; prokaryotes must transport materials through their cell walls, a process that severely limits their culinary options.
In most multicellular eukaryotes, cells come in two basic varieties: body cells (called somaticcells) and sex cells (or gametes). The two cell types have very different functions and are produced in very different ways.
Multicellular eukaryotes: Somatic cellsSomatic cells are produced by simple cell division called mitosis. Somatic cells of multicellular organisms like you are differentiated into special cell types. Skin cells and muscle cells are both somatic cells, for instance, but if you were to examine your skin cells under a microscope and compare them with your muscle cells, you'd see their structures are very different. The various cells that make up your body all have the same basic components (membrane, organelles, and so on), but the arrangements of the elements change from one cell type to the next so that they can carry out various jobs such as digestion (intestinal cells), energy storage (fat cells), or oxygen transport to your tissues (blood cells). Multicellular eukaryotes: Sex cells (gametes)Sex cells are specialized cells that are used for reproduction. Only eukaryotic organisms engage in sexual reproduction. Sexual reproduction combines genetic material from two organisms and requires special preparation in the form of a reduction in the amount of genetic material allocated to sex cells - a process called meiosi. In humans, the two types of sex cells are eggs and sperm.ÂAt a microscopic level, we are all composed of cells. Look at yourself in a mirror -- what you see is about 10 trillion cells divided into about 200 differenÂt types. Our muscles are made of muscle cells, our livers of liver cells, and there are even very specialized types of cells that make the enamel for our teeth or the clear lenses in our eyes!
If you want to Âunderstand how your body works, you need to understand cells. Everything from http://wiki.answers.com/human-reproduction.htmto infections to repairing a broken bone happens down at the cellular level. If you want to understand new frontiers like biotechnology and genetic engineering, you need to understand cells as well.
Anyone who reads the paper or any of the scientific magazines (Scientific American, Discover, Popular Science) is aware that genes are BIG news these days. Here are some of the terms you commonly see:
ÂGene science and genetics are rapidly changing the face of medicine, agriculture and even the legal system!
The cell and how it funcitons and works.
WHEN it works - solar by day, wind when its blowing.
the cell is a cell and an animal cell is an animal cell
Osmosis is the process where water passes into our tissues through a semi-permeable membrane. All of our cells are surrounded by a membrane that selectively allows in anything the cell needs but prevents unwanted molecules from entering. An egg also has a membrane surrounding it so we can use it to represent a cell and see how osmosis works.
IT depends on what cell. In the plant cell it is the cell wall and the cell membrane. But in the animal cell it is only the cell membrane.
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It is a cell which works by itself with no other cell`s help.
white blood cell
The cell works better…
There are several organelles that the cell nucleus works with. The cell nucleus works with the centriole, centrosome, lysosome, mitochondria, vacuole, ribosomes, and the endoplasmic reticulum.
It regulates what comes in and out of the cell. It works in order to keep bad things out of the cell.
i have no idea on how a generel cell works no other websites have it
cell membrane
mitochondria is found inside the cell , it works as the power house for the cell
Yep...works fr me...........
it goes through your blood