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GCSE/Combined Science/AQA

B1.1Cell structure: eukaryotes, prokaryotes, animal/plant cells, specialisation, differentiation, microscopy

Notes

Cell Structure (B1.1)

Cell biology underpins every other biology topic. Expect cell components, magnification calculations and specialised-cell questions in every series.

Eukaryotic vs prokaryotic

FeatureEukaryoticProkaryotic (bacteria)
Nucleus✓ membrane-bound✗ — DNA free in cytoplasm as circular chromosome
Size10–100 μm1–10 μm
ExamplesAnimal, plant, fungiAll bacteria

Animal cell components

  • Nucleus — contains DNA; controls cell activity
  • Cytoplasm — jelly-like matrix; site of most metabolic reactions
  • Cell membrane — selectively permeable; controls entry and exit
  • Mitochondria — site of aerobic respiration; ATP production
  • Ribosomes — site of protein synthesis

Plant cell — three extra structures

  • Cell wall (cellulose) — rigid support and shape
  • Permanent vacuole (cell sap) — maintains turgor pressure
  • Chloroplasts — contain chlorophyll; site of photosynthesis

Bacterial cell

DNA is a single circular chromosome in the nucleoid (not a nucleus). Also: peptidoglycan cell wall, cell membrane, smaller ribosomes, often plasmids, sometimes flagella and pili.

Specialised cells

CellKey adaptationFunction
SpermFlagellum, many mitochondria, acrosomeFertilise egg
Red blood cellBiconcave, no nucleus, packed haemoglobinCarry O₂
Root hair cellLong thin projectionAbsorb water and mineral ions
NeuroneLong axon, myelin sheathTransmit electrical impulses
Ciliated epithelialCilia on surfaceSweep mucus along airway

Differentiation and stem cells

Cells become specialised by differentiation — switching on specific genes. Stem cells retain the ability to divide and differentiate. Embryonic stem cells are pluripotent (any cell type); adult stem cells are multipotent (restricted range). Therapeutic uses: treating Parkinson's, diabetes, spinal injury. Ethical concern: destroying a potential human life.

Microscopy

Magnification formula:

magnification = image size ÷ actual size

Always use the same units (1 mm = 1 000 μm). Convert before dividing.

MicroscopeMax magResolutionCan see
Light×2 000~200 nmCells, nuclei, chloroplasts
Electron×2 000 000~0.1 nmRibosomes, organelle ultrastructure

Required practical: water drop → onion epidermis → iodine stain → coverslip at angle → low power first.

Common exam errors

  1. Saying bacteria have no DNA — they do, just no nucleus.
  2. Using "magnification" when "resolution" is meant.
  3. Forgetting unit conversion in magnification calculations.

AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-deep-combined-science

Practice questions

Try each before peeking at the worked solution.

  1. Question 13 marks

    Prokaryotic vs eukaryotic

    A cell contains ribosomes, a circular DNA molecule and a cell wall, but no nucleus.

    (a) State whether this cell is prokaryotic or eukaryotic. Give one reason. [2]
    (b) Name ONE structure found in this cell that is NOT found in a human cheek cell. [1]

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    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-deep-combined-science

  2. Question 23 marks

    Magnification calculation

    A student views a cell under a microscope. The image is 45 mm wide. The actual cell width is 150 μm.

    Calculate the magnification. Show your working. [3]

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    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-deep-combined-science

  3. Question 36 marks

    Specialised cells (6-marker)

    Describe how the structure of THREE different specialised cells is adapted to their function. [6]

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    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-deep-combined-science

  4. Question 46 marks

    Plant vs animal cells

    (a) Name THREE structures found in plant cells but NOT in animal cells. [3]
    (b) State the function of each. [3]

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    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-deep-combined-science

  5. Question 54 marks

    Stem cell therapy

    Explain how embryonic stem cells could be used to treat a patient with Type 1 diabetes. Include the term 'differentiation'. [4]

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    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-deep-combined-science

  6. Question 64 marks

    Light vs electron microscope

    Compare a light microscope and an electron microscope in terms of magnification, resolution and what can be observed. [4]

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    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-deep-combined-science

  7. Question 74 marks

    Slide preparation (required practical)

    Describe how to prepare a temporary slide of onion epidermis cells for viewing under a light microscope. [4]

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    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-deep-combined-science

Flashcards

B1.1 — Cell structure: eukaryotes, prokaryotes, animal/plant cells, specialisation, differentiation, microscopy

12-card SR deck for AQA Combined Science topic B1.1

12 cards · spaced repetition (SM-2)