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Kingdoms of life notes

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A detailed summary of kingdoms of life notes, unit 4

Institution
Freshman / 9th Grade
Course
Biology









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Institution
Freshman / 9th grade
Course
Biology
School year
1

Document information

Uploaded on
December 7, 2025
Number of pages
5
Written in
2025/2026
Type
Class notes
Professor(s)
Cynthia mckinney
Contains
Biology

Subjects

Content preview

Unit 4 cell theory
Summary of Cell Biology Concepts
This content provides a comprehensive overview of cell biology, focusing on the historical

development of cell theory, cell structures, types, organelles, and related biological concepts such as

energy metabolism and transport mechanisms. It also contrasts prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells,

introduces the endosymbiotic theory, and touches on the nature of viruses.


Key Historical Discoveries
Scientist(s) Contribution

Robert Hooke Coined the term “cell” after observing cork slices under an early

microscope

Anton van Discovered microorganisms in pond water using improved microscopy

Leeuwenhoek

Schleiden, Schwann, Formulated the foundational Cell Theory

Virchow

Janet Plowe Demonstrated that the cell membrane is a physical structure, not just

an interface

Lynn Margulis Proposed that some organelles were once free-living cells themselves

(Endosymbiotic Theory)

Cell Theory
●​ All living things are composed of cells.

●​ Cells are the basic units of structure and function in living organisms.

●​ New cells arise only from existing cells.

Excluded from Cell Theory:

●​ The statement “all cells contain DNA in their nucleus” is NOT part of Cell Theory, as some

cells (e.g., prokaryotes) do not have a nucleus.


Cell Types
There are two primary categories of cells:

Feature Prokaryotic Cells Eukaryotic Cells

, Unit 4 cell theory
Nucleus Absent (DNA located in nucleoid Present, well-defined

region) nucleus

Membrane-bound Absent Present

organelles

Size Generally smaller Generally larger

Examples Bacteria, Archaea Plants, animals, fungi,

protists

Common Features:

●​ Both have a cell membrane and cytoplasm.


Plant vs. Animal Cells
Plant cells contain all structures found in animal cells but have additional components:

●​ Large central vacuole (storage and structural support)

●​ Cell wall (rigid outer layer for protection and support)

●​ Chloroplasts (carry out photosynthesis)


Organelles and Their Functions
The term “organelles” means “little organs.” Organelles are specialized structures within cells, some

membrane-bound and others not, facilitating cellular functions by compartmentalization.

Organelle Function

Cell membrane Controls movement of substances in and out of the cell

Vesicles Transport materials within and outside the cell

Golgi bodies Modify, sort, and package proteins and lipids for secretion or

use within cell

Endoplasmic reticulum (ER) Rough ER: synthesizes proteins (with ribosomes)

Smooth ER: synthesizes lipids, steroids, and detoxifies toxins

Ribosomes Sites of protein synthesis

Nucleolus Produces ribosomal RNA and assembles ribosomes

Mitochondria Perform cellular respiration to generate energy (ATP)
R138,85
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