
An animal cell is made of several parts.
1.The cell membrane: Controls what goes in and out of a cell
2.Cytoplasm: Where it all happens, the chemical reactions take place here. The medium for the reactions of life
3.Mitochondria: Responsible for aerobic respiration
4. Ribosomes: Make proteins
5.Nucleus: Contains genetic material, DNA. Instructs how to make proteins
A plant cell is made of several different parts too
1.Cell wall: Keeps rigid shape
2.Cell membrane: Controls what goes in and out of the cell
3.Nucleus: Contains genetic material, instructions how to make proteins
4.Cytoplasm: Chemical reactions take place here
5.Chloroplasts: Photosynthesis occurs
6.Vacuole: Contains cell sap
7.Mitochondria
8.Ribosomes
(are ribosomes and mitochondria in plant cells?)
Misc
Cells (group together to form)> Tissues* (two or more combine for)> Organs (two or more combine for)>Organ system
*Four kinds
There are specialised cells. For example, red blood cells have no nucleus, are round and a large surface area
Sperm cells have a tail for getting about
White blood cells can change their shape to engulf microbes
Nerve cells can be very long and slender, and can carry nerve impulses over distances as long as one metre.
Using the microscope to look at cells from my cheek and onion cells
Getting a sample
1.Get a clean glass slide and a round glass wafer. Dry.
2.Get a swab and wipe it on the inside of cheek
3.Smear it on the glass slide
4.Drop blue dye over it, cover with round glass wafer.
Focusing the microscope
1.Plug in microscope
2. Carriage all the way up
3.Weakest lens, find the subject using coarse focus
4. Stronger lens, using fine focus
5. Stongest lens for detail
Put the microscope away obeying storage rules, flex around the upper to prevent melting, dust cover on, in cabinet.
Wow, I'm actually learning! Thanks for this Alex!
ReplyDeleteHope the GCSE is going well. And love the layout of the blog ;-)
Lucy
Thank you.
ReplyDelete