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The Fundamental Unit Of Life

What you will learn
  • The fundamental organisational unit of life is the cell.

  • Cells are enclosed by a plasma membrane composed of lipid and proteins.

  • The cell membrane is an active part of the cell. It regulates the movement of materials between the ordered interior of the cell and the outer environment.

  • In plant cells, a cell wall composed mainly of cellulose is located outside the cell membrane.

  • The presence of the cell wall enables the cells of plants, fungi and bacteria to exist in hypotonic media without bursting.

  • The nucleus in eukaryotes is separated from the cytoplasm by double-layered membrane and it directs the life processes of the cell.

  • The ER functions both as a passageway for intracellular transport and as a manufacturing surface.

  • The Golgi apparatus consists of stacks of membrane-bound vesicles that function in the storage, modification and packaging of substances manufactured in the cell.

  • Most plant cells have large membranous organelles called plastids, which are of two types – chromoplasts and leucoplasts.

  • Chromoplasts that contain chlorophyll are called chloroplasts and they perform photosynthesis.

  • The primary function of leucoplasts is storage.

  • Most mature plant cells have a large central vacuole that helps to maintain the turgidity of the cell and stores important substances including wastes.

  • Prokaryotic cells have no membrane-bound organelles, their chromosomes are composed of only nucleic acid, and they have only very small ribosomes as organelles.

  • Cells in organisms divide for growth of body, for replacing dead cells, and for forming gametes for reproduction.