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 Biological cell 

Another article is titled cell (mathematics).


The cell is the basic unit of life. All known cells (except a few specialized cell types) have certain basic components in common:

  • DNA, the genetic information that acts as a blueprint for the other components.
  • Proteins, the machinery of the cell.
  • Membranes, which separate the cell form its environment, work as a filter, and act as a communication relay with the outside.

They also share several abilities:

Organisms vary from single cells which survive individually, through colonial forms with multiple similar cells living together, to multicellular forms in which cells are specialized and do not generally survive if separated. There are 220 types of cells and tissues that make up the human body.

There are two basic types of cells: prokaryotic and eukaryotic. Prokaryotic cells are structurally simple. They are found only in single-celled and colonial organisms. In the three-domain system of taxonomy, prokaryotic cells are placed in the domains Archaea and Eubacteria. Eukaryotic cells have organelles with their own cell membranes. Single-celled eukaryotic organisms are very diverse, but many colonial and multicellular forms also exist. (The multicellular kingdoms, Animalia, Plantae and Fungi, are all eukaryotic.)

Features of prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells

  Prokaryotes Eukaryotes
typical organisms bacteria protists, fungi, plants, animals
typical size ~ 1-10 um ~ 10-100 um
type of nucleus nucleoid region[?]; no real nucleus real nucleus with double membrane
DNA circular linear molecules (chromosomes) with histone proteins
RNA-/protein-synthesis coupled in cytoplasm RNA-synthesis inside the core
protein synthesis in cytoplasm
ribosomes 50S+30S 60S+40S
cytoplasmatic structure very few structures highly structured by intercellular membranes and a cytoskeleton
cell movement[?] flagella made of flagellin[?] flagella and cilia made of tubulin[?]
mitochondria none one to several dozen
chloroplasts none in algae and plants
organization usually single cells single cells, colonies, higher organisms with specialized cells
cell division simple division Mitosis (core division)
Cytokinesis (cytoplasmatic division)

Prokaryotic cells

Eukaryotic cells

Diagram of a typical eukaryotic (animal) cell


Organelles:
  1. Nucleolus
  2. Nucleus
  3. Ribosome
  4. Vesicle
  5. Rough endoplasmic reticulum (ER)
  6. Golgi apparatus
  7. Microtubule
  8. Smooth ER
  9. Mitochondria
  10. Vacuole
  11. Cytoplasm
  12. Lysosome
  13. Centrioles

History

 

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