Why are cells so small?.  Why cells are small? Diffusion limits cell size DNA limits the cell size. Surface area- volume ratio.

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Presentation transcript:

Why are cells so small?

 Why cells are small? Diffusion limits cell size DNA limits the cell size. Surface area- volume ratio

 Diffusion is fast and efficient over short distances  Diffusion becomes slow and inefficient over larger distances. Small cell  good diffusion Big cell  bad diffusion  Speed of Diffusion An organelle in the center of a 20 μm diameter cell receives supplies a fraction of a second after it enters the cell. An organelle in the center of a 20 cm diameter cell would have to wait months before receiving supplies that enter the cell.

 The DNA tells the cell which proteins to be made.  Not enough protein the cell will die. Takes time for protein to be produced.  As cells increase in size, no extra DNA is made

 As cell size increases, volume increases much faster than surface area.  A bigger cell has a smaller surface area to volume ratio  This smaller ratio does not allow the cell to get enough “things” into it

 Before a cell gets too large, it divides into two “daughter” cells.  Before cell division takes place, the cell must replicate all of its DNA.  The cell then divides and solves the problem of the cell becoming too large.

1. Cell size vs. surface area must remain at an efficient ratio 2. Growth - bigger organism needs more cells 3. Repair - regeneration of skin, blood & bone etc. 4. Reproduction - asexual vs sexual

 Cut out and make boxes (cells)  Calculate area of one side ( L X W)  Calculate total surface area (L X W X # of sides)  Calculate volume of cube (L X W X H)  Measure distance from edge to the middle of the cell  Calculate surface area to volume ratio (SA/V)