Cell structures and microscopy (B1.1)
OCR Gateway places this topic at the very start of the biology course because every other topic in B1–B6 depends on knowing what's inside a cell and how we see it. Expect at least one short multiple-choice question on cell components, a label-the-diagram task, and a longer 6-mark question on either microscopy or specialised cells.
Eukaryotic vs prokaryotic cells
A eukaryotic cell has a true nucleus enclosed by a membrane and contains membrane-bound organelles. Animal cells, plant cells, fungi and protists are all eukaryotic.
A prokaryotic cell has no nucleus — its DNA is a single circular chromosome free in the cytoplasm. Bacteria are prokaryotic. Prokaryotic cells are typically 1–10 μm across; eukaryotic cells are 10–100 μm.
What every animal cell contains
| Sub-cellular structure | Function |
|---|---|
| Nucleus | Contains the DNA; controls cell activity |
| Cytoplasm | Jelly-like matrix where most reactions take place |
| Cell membrane | Controls what enters and leaves the cell |
| Mitochondria | Site of aerobic respiration; energy released |
| Ribosomes | Site of protein synthesis |
Plant cells — three additional structures
In addition to the animal-cell features above, plant cells have:
- Cell wall (made of cellulose) — gives the cell rigid shape.
- Permanent vacuole — filled with cell sap; supports the cell.
- Chloroplasts — site of photosynthesis; contain chlorophyll.
Bacterial (prokaryotic) cells
Bacteria contain:
- A cell wall (different chemistry from plant cell walls — it's made of peptidoglycan, not cellulose).
- A cell membrane.
- Cytoplasm.
- Ribosomes (smaller than eukaryotic ribosomes).
- A single circular DNA chromosome in a region called the nucleoid (NOT a nucleus).
- Often plasmids — small extra rings of DNA carrying genes for antibiotic resistance.
- Sometimes flagella (tail-like structures for movement) and pili (for attaching to surfaces).
⚠ Common error: writing that bacteria have no DNA. They do — it's just not in a nucleus.
Specialised cells you must know
| Specialised cell | Adaptation | Function |
|---|---|---|
| Sperm cell | Long tail / streamlined / many mitochondria / acrosome enzymes | Swim to fertilise egg |
| Egg (ovum) cell | Large food store / haploid nucleus / cell membrane changes after fertilisation | Provide nutrients for the embryo |
| Ciliated epithelial cell | Cilia on surface | Sweeps mucus / debris up the airway |
| Red blood cell | Biconcave shape / no nucleus / haemoglobin | Carry oxygen |
| Root hair cell | Long projection — increases surface area | Absorb water and mineral ions |
| Nerve cell (neurone) | Long axon / branched dendrites / myelin sheath | Transmit electrical impulses |
| Muscle cell | Many mitochondria / contractile proteins | Contract to produce movement |
Microscopy
A light microscope uses visible light and can magnify up to about ×2,000 with a resolution of ~200 nm — good enough to see cells, nuclei and large organelles like chloroplasts.
An electron microscope uses a beam of electrons and can magnify up to ×2,000,000 with a resolution of ~0.1 nm — good enough to see ribosomes, mitochondria and the internal structure of organelles.
The magnification equation
magnification = image size ÷ actual size
Always work in the same units. If image is 4 cm and actual is 0.5 mm, convert: 4 cm = 40 mm. Magnification = 40 / 0.5 = ×80.
Required practical: making a slide
- Add a drop of water to a slide.
- Place a thin onion-epidermis specimen onto the water.
- Add a drop of iodine stain (highlights starch / nuclei).
- Lower a coverslip from one edge using a mounted needle to avoid air bubbles.
- View on low power first; switch to high power once focused.
Common Gateway-paper mistakes
- Saying bacteria have a nucleus (they have a nucleoid).
- Calling chloroplasts "the place where respiration happens" — that's mitochondria.
- Using "magnification" when you mean "resolution".
- Forgetting unit conversion in the magnification equation.
- Drawing a plant cell that lacks chloroplasts in a question about a leaf cell — for photosynthesising plant cells, ALWAYS include chloroplasts.
➜Try this— Quick check
- A prokaryotic cell is 5 μm across; under a microscope it appears 4 mm. What is the magnification? (4,000 ÷ 5) = ×800.
- Name two structures in a plant cell that are NOT in an animal cell. Cell wall, vacuole, chloroplasts (any 2).
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