2.1 Cells & Organisation
All living things are made of cells — the basic unit of life. In this topic you will learn how cells are structured, what each part does, and how cells work together to form entire organisms.
Why Cells Matter
Every function your body performs — breathing, digesting food, thinking, growing — starts at the cell level. Understanding cells is the foundation of all biology. Without cells, there is no life.
What You Will Learn
- The three statements of cell theory
- The difference between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells
- The structures found in plant and animal cells
- How cells organise into tissues, organs, and organ systems
- How to use a microscope to observe cells
Cell Theory
Cell theory is one of the most important ideas in biology. It was developed in the 1800s by scientists including Schleiden, Schwann, and Virchow.
The Three Statements of Cell Theory
- All living things are made of one or more cells.
- The cell is the basic unit of life. All life processes happen inside cells.
- All cells come from pre-existing cells. New cells are made by existing cells dividing.
Two Types of Cells
| Feature | Prokaryotic Cell | Eukaryotic Cell |
|---|---|---|
| Nucleus | No membrane-bound nucleus | Has a membrane-bound nucleus |
| DNA location | Floats freely in the cytoplasm | Inside the nucleus |
| Organelles | No membrane-bound organelles | Has membrane-bound organelles (mitochondria, ER, etc.) |
| Size | Smaller (1–5 µm) | Larger (10–100 µm) |
| Examples | Bacteria | Plant cells, animal cells, fungi |
Cell Structure
Cells contain tiny structures called organelles, each with a specific job. Think of them like organs inside a miniature body.
Key Organelles and Their Functions
| Organelle | Function |
|---|---|
| Cell membrane | Controls what enters and exits the cell; acts as a protective barrier |
| Nucleus | Contains DNA (genetic material); controls cell activities and cell division |
| Cytoplasm | Jelly-like substance where chemical reactions take place |
| Mitochondria | Carries out aerobic respiration — converts glucose and oxygen into energy (ATP). The “powerhouse of the cell” |
| Ribosomes | Make proteins by reading instructions from DNA |
| Cell wall | Rigid outer layer made of cellulose; provides support and shape (plant cells only) |
| Chloroplast | Contains chlorophyll; carries out photosynthesis — converts light energy into glucose (plant cells only) |
| Vacuole | Large permanent vacuole in plant cells stores cell sap and keeps the cell firm; animal cells may have small temporary vacuoles |
Memory Tip
Think of the cell as a factory: the nucleus is the manager (gives instructions), ribosomes are the workers (make products), mitochondria are the power plant (supply energy), and the cell membrane is the security gate (controls entry and exit).
Plant vs Animal Cells
Both plant and animal cells are eukaryotic, but they have important differences that you need to know.
Comparison Table
| Feature | Plant Cell | Animal Cell |
|---|---|---|
| Cell wall | Yes (cellulose) | No |
| Chloroplasts | Yes | No |
| Large permanent vacuole | Yes | No (small temporary ones) |
| Cell membrane | Yes | Yes |
| Nucleus | Yes | Yes |
| Mitochondria | Yes | Yes |
| Cytoplasm | Yes | Yes |
| Ribosomes | Yes | Yes |
| Shape | Regular, box-like | Irregular, rounded |
Why the Differences?
- Chloroplasts — Plants make their own food through photosynthesis; animals eat food instead.
- Cell wall — Gives plants rigidity so they can stand upright without a skeleton.
- Large vacuole — Stores water and keeps plant cells turgid (firm). When a plant wilts, its vacuoles have lost water.
Levels of Organisation
In multicellular organisms, cells do not work alone. They are organised into groups that carry out specific functions together.
From Smallest to Largest
Cell → Tissue → Organ → Organ System → Organism
| Level | Definition | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Cell | The basic unit of life | A red blood cell |
| Tissue | A group of similar cells working together | Muscle tissue (many muscle cells) |
| Organ | A group of different tissues working together | The heart (muscle tissue + nerve tissue + blood tissue) |
| Organ System | A group of organs working together for a major function | The circulatory system (heart + blood vessels + blood) |
| Organism | A complete living thing made of all its organ systems | A human being |
Key Organ Systems
- Digestive system — breaks down food into nutrients (mouth, stomach, intestines)
- Respiratory system — takes in oxygen and removes carbon dioxide (lungs, trachea)
- Circulatory system — transports blood around the body (heart, blood vessels)
- Nervous system — sends electrical signals to control the body (brain, spinal cord, nerves)
- Skeletal system — supports the body and protects organs (bones, joints)
Using Microscopes
Microscopes allow us to see cells and structures that are too small for the naked eye. You need to know how to use a light microscope safely and correctly.
Parts of a Light Microscope
| Part | Function |
|---|---|
| Eyepiece lens | The lens you look through (usually 10x magnification) |
| Objective lenses | Lenses near the specimen that magnify at different powers (4x, 10x, 40x) |
| Stage | The platform where you place the slide |
| Light source / Mirror | Shines light through the specimen so you can see it |
| Focus knobs | Coarse focus (big movements) and fine focus (small adjustments) to sharpen the image |
Calculating Magnification
Total magnification = 10 × 40 = 400x
This means the specimen appears 400 times larger than its actual size.
Worked Examples
These examples show the kind of structured answers expected in IB MYP assessments. Notice how each answer uses evidence and scientific vocabulary.
Cell wall — a rigid outer layer made of cellulose that provides structural support and gives the cell its box-like shape.
Cell membrane — a thin layer inside the cell wall that controls what enters and exits the cell.
Nucleus — contains the cell’s DNA and controls all cell activities.
Cytoplasm — the jelly-like substance where chemical reactions take place.
Large vacuole — filled with cell sap; keeps the cell turgid (firm).
Note: The student would NOT see chloroplasts because onion cells are underground and do not carry out photosynthesis (they are not green).
Tissue level: These similar cells group together to form epithelial tissue (lining tissue) and glandular tissue (secreting tissue).
Organ level: The stomach is an organ made of muscle tissue (to churn food), glandular tissue (to produce enzymes), and epithelial tissue (to line and protect the stomach).
Organ system level: The stomach works with other organs — the mouth, oesophagus, small intestine, large intestine, and liver — to form the digestive system, which breaks down food into nutrients the body can absorb.
Organism level: The digestive system works with all other systems (circulatory, respiratory, etc.) to keep the whole organism alive.
While bacteria do not have a membrane-bound nucleus, they still contain DNA which floats freely in their cytoplasm. Cell theory states that all living things are made of cells — and bacteria ARE cells. They carry out all life processes: they grow, reproduce (by binary fission), respond to their environment, and metabolise nutrients.
The absence of a membrane-bound nucleus is what makes them prokaryotic rather than eukaryotic — it does not mean they are not alive.
Explanation: Without light, the chloroplasts in the plant cells cannot carry out photosynthesis (converting light energy into glucose). The plant would run out of glucose for energy and food. The chlorophyll in the chloroplasts would break down, making the leaves lose their green colour.
The cells would also lose water from their vacuoles over time without proper function, causing them to become flaccid (soft) instead of turgid (firm). This would make the plant wilt. Eventually, without energy from photosynthesis, the cells would die.
Explanation: You should always start with the lowest power objective lens (e.g., 4x) because:
1. It provides a wider field of view, making it easier to locate the specimen on the slide.
2. It prevents the lens from crashing into the slide — higher power lenses are longer and sit closer to the specimen.
3. Once you have found and centred the specimen, you can switch to a higher power to see more detail.
Chloroplasts are found only in plant cells because only plants make their own food through photosynthesis (light + CO₂ + water → glucose + oxygen). Animals do not photosynthesise — they obtain glucose by eating other organisms.
Key insight: Plant cells have BOTH mitochondria and chloroplasts. The chloroplasts make glucose using light, and the mitochondria then break down that glucose to release energy.
Practice Q&A
Attempt each question before revealing the model answer.
Flashcard Review
Tap each card to reveal the answer. Try to answer from memory first.
Practice Test
20 questions covering cell theory, cell structure, plant vs animal cells, organisation, and microscopes.