The Fundamental Unit of Life — Class 9 (CBSE)
Take a leaf, an onion peel, a drop of pond water, a cheek scraping — look at any under a microscope and you'll see the same thing: a million tiny boxes called cells. Every organism on Earth, from the bacterium living on your skin to the blue whale, is built of cells doing specific jobs. This chapter unpacks the cell — biology's atom.
1. The story — how we discovered cells
In 1665, Robert Hooke peered through a primitive microscope at a thin slice of cork. He saw a honeycomb of empty boxes and called them "cellulae" (Latin for "little rooms"). He didn't know living things were made of these — he was looking at dead cell walls.
Over the next 200 years:
- 1674 — Anton van Leeuwenhoek built much better microscopes and saw "animalcules" (live single-celled organisms) in pond water. The first to see LIVING cells.
- 1831 — Robert Brown discovered the nucleus.
- 1838 — Matthias Schleiden proposed that all plants are made of cells.
- 1839 — Theodor Schwann extended this to animals.
- 1855 — Rudolf Virchow added: "All cells come from pre-existing cells" (Omnis cellula e cellula).
Together these gave the Cell Theory:
- All living organisms are made of cells.
- The cell is the basic structural and functional unit of life.
- All cells arise from pre-existing cells.
This theory does to biology what Dalton's atomic theory does to chemistry. From this point forward, biology is the study of cells.
2. Two types of cells — and the great divide
All cells fall into one of two categories.
Prokaryotic cells
- No true nucleus — DNA floats in the cytoplasm in a region called the nucleoid.
- No membrane-bound organelles (no mitochondria, no ER, no Golgi, no chloroplasts).
- Small (1–10 μm).
- Single-celled organisms.
- Examples: bacteria, blue-green algae (cyanobacteria), archaea.
Eukaryotic cells
- True nucleus, surrounded by a nuclear membrane.
- Multiple membrane-bound organelles (mitochondria, ER, Golgi, etc.).
- Larger (10–100 μm).
- Single-celled OR multicellular organisms.
- Examples: fungi, plants, animals, protists (Amoeba, Paramecium), all multicellular life.
Quick differences
| Feature | Prokaryote | Eukaryote |
|---|---|---|
| Nucleus | Nucleoid only | True nucleus (membrane-bound) |
| Membrane organelles | Absent | Present |
| Size | 1–10 μm | 10–100 μm |
| Ribosomes | 70S (smaller) | 80S |
| Examples | Bacteria, cyanobacteria | Fungi, plants, animals |
| Cell division | Binary fission | Mitosis / Meiosis |
3. The eukaryotic cell — anatomy by organelle
Here we go through every organelle: structure, function, exam factoid. Memorise this section like a vocabulary list — questions on organelles are the most predictable in CBSE.
Cell membrane (plasma membrane)
- Outermost layer of an animal cell (also present in plant cells, just inside the cell wall).
- Selectively permeable — lets some substances pass, blocks others.
- Made of phospholipid bilayer + proteins (fluid mosaic model).
- Functions: shape, protection, selective transport (diffusion, osmosis, active transport).
Cell wall
- Only in plant cells, fungi, bacteria (NOT animal cells).
- Made of cellulose in plants, chitin in fungi, peptidoglycan in bacteria.
- Functions: rigidity, structural support, prevents osmotic damage.
Nucleus
- The "control centre" — contains DNA (genetic material).
- Surrounded by nuclear membrane with pores.
- Inside: chromatin (DNA + proteins) and nucleolus (synthesizes ribosomes).
- Functions: controls cell activities, stores genetic information, directs cell division.
Cytoplasm
- The jelly-like fluid inside the cell membrane (except the nucleus).
- Contains all the organelles + dissolved nutrients, enzymes, salts.
- Site of many chemical reactions (e.g., glycolysis).
Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER)
- A network of folded membranes throughout the cytoplasm.
- Two types:
- Rough ER (RER): has ribosomes on it → synthesises proteins for export.
- Smooth ER (SER): no ribosomes → synthesises lipids, steroids, detoxifies drugs.
- Acts as a transport network.
Ribosomes
- Tiny granules, sometimes free in cytoplasm, sometimes attached to RER.
- Function: synthesise proteins by reading mRNA.
- Smaller (70S) in prokaryotes; larger (80S) in eukaryotes.
Golgi apparatus (or Golgi complex)
- Stack of flat membrane-bound sacs.
- Modifies, packages and sends proteins/lipids from the ER to their destinations.
- Discovered by Camillo Golgi (1898).
- Nickname: the "post office" of the cell.
Mitochondria
- Bean-shaped organelles with a double membrane (inner one folded into cristae).
- Site of cellular respiration → produces ATP (energy currency).
- Nickname: the "powerhouse of the cell".
- Have their own DNA (and ribosomes) — supports the endosymbiosis theory.
Plastids (only in plant cells)
Three types:
- Chloroplast (green) — contains chlorophyll, site of photosynthesis.
- Chromoplast (red, orange, yellow) — colours flowers and fruits.
- Leucoplast (colourless) — stores starch, oils.
Chloroplasts have a double membrane and internal stacks called grana where photosynthesis happens.
Vacuoles
- Membrane-bound sacs storing water, salts, sugars, waste.
- Animal cells: small and many.
- Plant cells: one huge central vacuole taking up to 90 % of the cell volume.
- Function: storage, turgor pressure (keeps plant cells firm), waste isolation.
Lysosomes
- Small membrane-bound vesicles containing digestive enzymes.
- Function: digest food, worn-out organelles, and (if the cell is dying) the cell itself → "suicide bags of the cell".
- Burst when a cell is damaged → digest cell contents.
Cytoskeleton (advanced)
- Network of protein filaments (microfilaments, microtubules) inside the cytoplasm.
- Provides cell shape, helps in movement of organelles.
4. Plant cell vs Animal cell — the 5 differences
| Feature | Plant cell | Animal cell |
|---|---|---|
| Cell wall | Present (cellulose) | Absent |
| Plastids | Present (incl. chloroplasts) | Absent |
| Vacuole | One large central vacuole | Small, many |
| Centrosome | Absent | Present (involved in cell division) |
| Lysosomes | Few / absent | Many |
| Shape | Fixed rectangular | Variable, often round |
Memorise: plant cell HAS cell wall, plastids, big vacuole. Animal cell HAS centrosome, more lysosomes.
5. Diffusion, osmosis and tonicity — cells in fluids
Cells can't survive in pure water without controls. The membrane-fluid interactions decide whether cells expand, shrink, or maintain shape.
Diffusion
- Movement of particles from high concentration to low concentration (down a gradient).
- Random thermal motion → eventual uniform distribution.
- Happens in solids, liquids and gases (fastest in gases).
- Example: O₂ entering blood through alveoli; CO₂ leaving blood.
Osmosis
- Special case of diffusion involving water across a semipermeable membrane.
- Water moves from a region of higher water potential (= lower solute concentration) to lower water potential (= higher solute concentration).
- Example: roots absorbing water from soil; water absorbed in your intestines.
Tonicity — three cases
Place a cell in a solution. Compare the solute concentration:
- Hypotonic solution (outside has LESS solute than inside): water rushes INTO the cell → cell swells. In extreme: animal cell BURSTS (cytolysis). Plant cell becomes turgid (which is healthy — keeps plants upright).
- Isotonic solution (same solute concentration): no net water movement. Cell stays the same.
- Hypertonic solution (outside has MORE solute than inside): water leaves the cell → cell shrinks. Plasmolysis in plant cells. Animal cells crenate.
Why salt kills slugs / preserves food: salt creates a hypertonic environment → bacteria and pests lose water → die or become inactive. Same principle behind preserved pickles and dried meats.
Activity (NCERT classic)
Soak raisins in water → raisins swell (hypotonic to inside the raisin → water enters). Place a peeled potato cube in concentrated salt water → it shrinks (hypertonic → water leaves).
6. Cell division — a quick preview
Cells divide to grow, repair, and reproduce. Two types:
Mitosis
- Produces 2 daughter cells, each genetically identical to parent.
- Number of chromosomes: SAME as parent (diploid → diploid).
- Used in growth and repair.
Meiosis
- Produces 4 daughter cells, each with HALF the chromosomes.
- Used in formation of gametes (sperm, egg, pollen).
- Diploid (2n) → haploid (n).
Detailed mechanics come in Class 10 (and especially Class 11). For Class 9, knowing what each does is enough.
7. Closing thought
You started this chapter knowing a few cells exist. You're ending with a working map of every organelle and what it does. Look at any living thing now and you can name what's happening inside its cells: chloroplasts capturing sunlight in a leaf, mitochondria making ATP in your muscles, lysosomes recycling worn-out parts in your liver cells, ribosomes translating mRNA into the very proteins that built this knowledge of the cell.
The cell is biology's atom — small, specialised, alive. Everything else in biology (tissues, organs, organ systems, ecosystems) is just clever ways cells cooperate.
