Comparing Plant and Animal Cells Mrs. Hennessey. What is a cell? definition: a small compartment...

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Comparing Plant and Animal Cells Mrs. Hennessey

Transcript of Comparing Plant and Animal Cells Mrs. Hennessey. What is a cell? definition: a small compartment...

Page 1: Comparing Plant and Animal Cells Mrs. Hennessey. What is a cell? definition: a small compartment that holds all of the biological equipment necessary.

Comparing Plant and Animal Cells

Mrs. Hennessey

Page 2: Comparing Plant and Animal Cells Mrs. Hennessey. What is a cell? definition: a small compartment that holds all of the biological equipment necessary.

What is a cell?definition: a small

compartment that holds all of the biological

equipment necessary to keep an organism alive

Page 3: Comparing Plant and Animal Cells Mrs. Hennessey. What is a cell? definition: a small compartment that holds all of the biological equipment necessary.

►Basically, cells are the building blocks of life.► They come in many different shapes and

sizes ►They perform a variety of functions.

Page 4: Comparing Plant and Animal Cells Mrs. Hennessey. What is a cell? definition: a small compartment that holds all of the biological equipment necessary.

About cells…

Their main purpose is to organize.

They make up all living things.

Cells are alive!

Page 5: Comparing Plant and Animal Cells Mrs. Hennessey. What is a cell? definition: a small compartment that holds all of the biological equipment necessary.

Animal CellWhat is it?

• makes up many tissues in animals• many types (cheek, nerve, muscle)

Page 6: Comparing Plant and Animal Cells Mrs. Hennessey. What is a cell? definition: a small compartment that holds all of the biological equipment necessary.

Plant CellWhat is it?

• a structural and functional unit of a plant

• different plant cells have different roles

Page 7: Comparing Plant and Animal Cells Mrs. Hennessey. What is a cell? definition: a small compartment that holds all of the biological equipment necessary.

Plant Cells vs Animal Cells:Similarities

►Both animal and plant cells have cell membranes that enclose the cell.

►Both are filled with cytoplasm, a gel-like substance containing chemicals needed by the cell.

►Both have a nucleus where DNA is stored.

►Both have ribosomes, protein builders of cells.

Page 8: Comparing Plant and Animal Cells Mrs. Hennessey. What is a cell? definition: a small compartment that holds all of the biological equipment necessary.

Similarities Continued

►Both plant and animal cells have mitochondria that use oxygen to break down food and release energy.

►Both kinds of cells have vacuoles that contain food, water, or waste products. (Animal cells usually have many more vacuoles than plant cells do.)

Page 9: Comparing Plant and Animal Cells Mrs. Hennessey. What is a cell? definition: a small compartment that holds all of the biological equipment necessary.

A Few More Similarities

►Both have endoplasmic reticulum, where a system of tubes transports proteins.

►Both have Golgi bodies to distribute proteins outside of the cell.

Page 10: Comparing Plant and Animal Cells Mrs. Hennessey. What is a cell? definition: a small compartment that holds all of the biological equipment necessary.

Plant and Animal Cells:Differences

►Plant cells have cell walls that provide structure. Animal cells do not have cell walls.

►A few large animal cells have more than one nucleus, but plant cells ALWAYS have just one.

►Plant cells have chloroplasts for photosynthesis. Animal cells do not.

Page 11: Comparing Plant and Animal Cells Mrs. Hennessey. What is a cell? definition: a small compartment that holds all of the biological equipment necessary.

More Differences:

►Animal cells use mitochondria for energy production. Plants primarily use chloroplasts to produce energy.

►Animal cells tend to have many small vacuoles. Mature plant cells may have only one large vacuole.

►Animals cells have lysosomes, but plant cells do not.

Page 12: Comparing Plant and Animal Cells Mrs. Hennessey. What is a cell? definition: a small compartment that holds all of the biological equipment necessary.

Activity

►Use a Venn Diagram to compare the animal cell to the plant cell.

Page 13: Comparing Plant and Animal Cells Mrs. Hennessey. What is a cell? definition: a small compartment that holds all of the biological equipment necessary.

Plant Animal

Both

mitochondria

Golgi apparatus

nucleus

cytoplasm

ribosomes

rough and smooth

endoplasmic reticulum

cell wall no cell wall

large vacuole

chloroplasts

Compare and Contrast

small or no vacuole

no chloroplasts

flagellaflagella only in

gametes

Page 14: Comparing Plant and Animal Cells Mrs. Hennessey. What is a cell? definition: a small compartment that holds all of the biological equipment necessary.

Cells & Energy

►Cells get energy originally from the sun.

►In plant cells, chloroplasts trap light energy and change it into chemical energy.

Page 15: Comparing Plant and Animal Cells Mrs. Hennessey. What is a cell? definition: a small compartment that holds all of the biological equipment necessary.

Cells & Energy (continued!)

►Chemical bonds hold two or more atoms together to form molecules of sugar.

►Both plant and animal cells break down these molecules by breaking the chemical bond. When the bonds are broken, energy is released.

►Cells can either use the energy or store it.

►Mitochondria in plant and animal cells use oxygen to release this energy.

Page 16: Comparing Plant and Animal Cells Mrs. Hennessey. What is a cell? definition: a small compartment that holds all of the biological equipment necessary.

Cells Using Information

►The nucleus is the control center of plant and animal cells.

►The nucleus contains DNA.►DNA and RNA molecules work together

to make proteins. Cells require thousands of protein molecules in order to work well.

Page 17: Comparing Plant and Animal Cells Mrs. Hennessey. What is a cell? definition: a small compartment that holds all of the biological equipment necessary.

More DNA

►DNA in a cell’s nucleus determines what kind of cell it it.

►DNA has instructions for all of the cell’s activities.

►DNA doubles when a cell divides.