Topic 01 | Biological sciences

Cells & cell theory

Year 8 (Levels 7-8 band): cell theory as the foundation of biology, structure and function of organelles in plant and animal cells, and the prokaryote-eukaryote distinction.

45-60 min Printable practice Answer key Challenge included
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Read the explanation, work through the examples, then complete the core practice before printing.

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What you will learn

Worked example 0 Real-world example: why a sunflower needs chloroplasts

A sunflower plant converts sunlight into sugars it can use for growth. Explain which part of its cells does this and why an animal cell could not do the same.

  1. Sunflower leaf cells contain chloroplasts — green organelles packed with chlorophyll that captures light energy.
  2. Chlorophyll inside chloroplasts runs photosynthesis, combining carbon dioxide and water to make glucose (sugar).
  3. Animal cells do not have chloroplasts, so they cannot make their own food from sunlight — they must eat other organisms instead.

Key idea: a cell’s job is set by the organelles it contains. No chloroplasts, no photosynthesis.

1. Cell theory

Cell theory is one of the big unifying ideas in biology. It was developed over about 200 years of microscope work by scientists including Robert Hooke (who named “cells” in 1665), Anton van Leeuwenhoek, Schleiden, Schwann, and Virchow.

Cell theory has three main statements:

  1. All living things are made of one or more cells.
  2. The cell is the basic unit of structure and function in life.
  3. All cells come from pre-existing cells (they do not appear spontaneously).

2. Parts of a cell (organelles)

Organelles are tiny specialised structures inside a cell, each with a specific job. Think of a cell as a tiny factory — each organelle is a different department.

Animal vs plant cellAnimal cellnucleuscentral vacuolePlant cellnucleuschloroplast
Generalised animal cell (left) and plant cell (right). The plant cell has a cell wall, chloroplasts and a large central vacuole; the animal cell does not.

Organelles found in both plant and animal cells:

Only in plant cells:

Worked example 1 Matching structure to function

You are told a cell has a cell wall, chloroplasts and a large central vacuole. Is it a plant cell or animal cell? Explain.

  1. Animal cells have no cell wall, no chloroplasts, and only small vacuoles.
  2. Plant cells have all three of these features.
  3. So the cell is a plant cell.

Key idea: three “extra” structures (wall, chloroplasts, big vacuole) are the quick test for plant vs animal.

3. Prokaryotic vs eukaryotic cells

All cells fall into one of two broad groups.

FeatureProkaryoticEukaryotic
ExamplesBacteria, archaeaPlants, animals, fungi, protists
NucleusNo (DNA floats free)Yes (DNA inside a nucleus)
Membrane-bound organellesNoYes
SizeSmall (1\sim 11010 μ\mum)Larger (10\sim 10100100 μ\mum)
Cell wallUsually yesPlants and fungi yes, animals no
Worked example 2 Classifying a mystery cell

An organism is made of a single cell roughly 22 μ\mum across. It has DNA but no nucleus, no mitochondria, and a cell wall. Prokaryote or eukaryote?

  1. No nucleus and no mitochondria rules out eukaryote.
  2. Small size and free DNA match prokaryote.
  3. This is a prokaryotic cell (most likely a bacterium).

Key idea: the presence of a nucleus is the clearest marker of a eukaryote.

4. Microscopes and magnification

Most cells are far too small to see with the naked eye (<0.1< 0.1 mm). Microscopes magnify images so we can study them. Magnification is how many times bigger the image is than the real object.

Magnification
M=image sizeobject size.M = \dfrac{\text{image size}}{\text{object size}}.

Both measurements must use the same units.

Worked example 3 Calculating magnification

Under a microscope, a cell that is really 2525 μ\mum wide appears 55 mm across on a photograph. Find the magnification.

  1. Convert to the same units: 55 mm =5000= 5000 μ\mum.
  2. M=500025=200M = \dfrac{5000}{25} = 200.
  3. The image is 200200 times bigger than the real cell (written as ×200\times 200).
Worked example 4 Finding the real size

An image shows a cell 1212 mm long at ×400\times 400 magnification. Find the actual cell length in micrometres.

  1. object=imageM=12 mm400=0.03\text{object} = \dfrac{\text{image}}{M} = \dfrac{12 \text{ mm}}{400} = 0.03 mm.
  2. Convert: 0.030.03 mm =30= 30 μ\mum.

5. Unicellular vs multicellular life

Specialisation lets large organisms like humans do things no single cell could manage alone.


Practice: Year 8

Fluency

Cell theory & parts

    1. State the three main points of cell theory.
    2. Name the organelle that (a) controls the cell, (b) releases energy, (c) carries out photosynthesis.
    3. List three structures found in plant cells but not animal cells.
    4. What is the function of the cell membrane?
    5. What is the cytoplasm?
    6. Give one example of a unicellular organism and one of a multicellular organism.
Fluency

Prokaryote vs eukaryote

    1. Do prokaryotic cells have a nucleus?
    2. Which group is generally larger — prokaryotes or eukaryotes?
    3. Give two examples of prokaryotic organisms.
    4. Name three kingdoms that are made of eukaryotic cells.
    5. Why is the absence of a nucleus not the same as having no DNA?
Fluency

Magnification

    1. An image is 88 mm long; the real object is 4040 μ\mum. Find the magnification.
    2. A cell is 6060 μ\mum long. At ×500\times 500, how long is the image (in mm)?
    3. A photograph shows a cell 2424 mm wide at ×300\times 300. Find the real width (in μ\mum).
    4. Convert: 0.20.2 mm to μ\mum; 45004500 μ\mum to mm.
Reasoning

Explain and analyse

    1. Explain why red blood cells, which have lost their nucleus, cannot divide.
    2. Why is it helpful that multicellular organisms have specialised cells?
    3. A leaf cell is placed in the dark for three days. Predict what happens to the chloroplasts and why.
    4. A student says “bacteria don’t count as alive because they have no nucleus.” Use cell theory to explain why they are wrong.
Problem solving

Applied contexts

    1. A hospital lab photographs a cell at ×1000\times 1000. On screen it is 3030 mm wide. How big is it in reality (μ\mum)?
    2. Yeast cells are roughly 55 μ\mum across. How many could you line up across a 11 mm gap?
    3. A cheek cell (animal) is placed next to an onion cell (plant) under a microscope. List two differences a student should notice.
    4. Explain, using cell theory, why hospitals sterilise surgical instruments.

Challenge

Reasoning

Harder reasoning

    1. Mitochondria and chloroplasts both have their own DNA. Biologists believe they were once free-living bacteria absorbed by a larger cell (the endosymbiotic theory). Give two pieces of evidence from what you know about prokaryotes that support this theory.
    2. A biologist observes a cell with a cell wall but no chloroplasts. List two possible identities for this cell and explain how you would decide between them.
    3. Estimate how many cells are in a 11 cm3^3 cube of muscle tissue, assuming each cell is roughly a cube 2020 μ\mum on each side.
    4. Explain why unicellular organisms are generally smaller than individual cells inside a multicellular organism.
Answers

Answer key

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Year 8 answers

Fluency

Cell theory & parts

    1. (i) All living things are made of cells; (ii) the cell is the basic unit of structure and function; (iii) all cells come from pre-existing cells.
    2. (a) Nucleus, (b) mitochondrion, (c) chloroplast.
    3. Cell wall, chloroplasts, large central vacuole.
    4. Controls what enters and leaves the cell; separates the cell from its surroundings.
    5. The jelly-like fluid inside the cell where organelles sit and most chemical reactions happen.
    6. Unicellular: bacterium, yeast, Amoeba. Multicellular: human, tree, mushroom.
Fluency

Prokaryote vs eukaryote

    1. No — their DNA floats freely in the cytoplasm.
    2. Eukaryotes (typically 10-100 μ\mum vs 1-10 μ\mum for prokaryotes).
    3. Bacteria (e.g. E. coli), archaea.
    4. Animals, plants, fungi (also protists).
    5. Prokaryotes still carry DNA; it is simply not enclosed in a membrane-bound nucleus.
Fluency

Magnification

    1. 88 mm =8000= 8000 μ\mum. M=8000/40=×200M = 8000 / 40 = \times 200.
    2. Image =60×500=30000= 60 \times 500 = 30\,000 μ\mum =30= 30 mm.
    3. 2424 mm =24000= 24\,000 μ\mum. Real =24000/300=80= 24\,000 / 300 = 80 μ\mum.
    4. 0.20.2 mm =200= 200 μ\mum; 45004500 μ\mum =4.5= 4.5 mm.
Reasoning

Explain and analyse

    1. Cell division needs DNA to be copied. Without a nucleus, a red blood cell has no DNA, so it cannot make new cells.
    2. Specialisation lets different cells do different jobs well (e.g. muscle contracts, nerves signal). This is more efficient than every cell trying to do everything.
    3. Without light, chloroplasts cannot photosynthesise. Chlorophyll may break down over time and the leaf may turn pale/yellow.
    4. Cell theory states all living things are made of cells. Bacteria are cells, so they are alive, even though they lack a nucleus. Having a nucleus is not a requirement for life.
Problem solving

Applied contexts

    1. Real size =30= 30 mm /1000=0.03/ 1000 = 0.03 mm =30= 30 μ\mum.
    2. 11 mm =1000= 1000 μ\mum. 1000/5=2001000 / 5 = 200 cells.
    3. Two of: plant cell has a cell wall (rigid, rectangular shape); plant cell has chloroplasts (green); plant cell has a large central vacuole.
    4. All cells come from pre-existing cells (cell theory, point 3). Surgical tools can carry bacterial cells that would reproduce inside a patient and cause infection. Sterilising destroys those cells.
Reasoning

Challenge

    1. (i) Mitochondria and chloroplasts are about the size of bacteria (prokaryotes). (ii) They have their own circular DNA, like prokaryotes. (iii) They divide by splitting in two, like bacteria.
    2. A fungal cell (has wall, no chloroplasts) or a bacterial cell (has wall, no chloroplasts). Check for a nucleus: fungi are eukaryotic and have one; bacteria do not.
    3. Volume of 11 cm3^3 = 101210^{12} μ\mum3^3. Volume per cell =203=8000= 20^3 = 8000 μ\mum3^3. Number of cells 1012/8000=1.25×108\approx 10^{12} / 8000 = 1.25 \times 10^8, i.e. about 125 million cells.
    4. A unicellular organism must carry out every life process in one cell — limiting its maximum size because surface area must keep up with internal volume. Cells inside a multicellular organism can be supplied by blood and specialise, so they can be larger or have extreme shapes (e.g. long nerve cells).

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