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Chapter 1 · Cell and Its Structure

Animal Cell: Organelles and Functions

~18 min · Pages 1–18

What is an Animal Cell?

An animal cell is a eukaryotic cell surrounded by a flexible plasma membrane. Unlike plant cells, animal cells lack a rigid cell wall, allowing them to take on various shapes. The interior is filled with cytoplasm — a gel-like matrix in which all organelles are suspended. Every process that keeps you alive happens inside trillions of these microscopic units.

The Nucleus: Control Centre

The nucleus is the largest organelle and serves as the cell's control centre. Enclosed by a double membrane called the nuclear envelope, it houses the cell's genetic material in the form of DNA organised into chromosomes. The nucleus directs all cellular activities by controlling which proteins are synthesised.

HSC Exam Focus

For HSC Biology, practise writing organelle functions in one clear sentence. Common exam questions ask you to compare animal and plant cell structures, or explain why a particular organelle is abundant in a specific tissue type (e.g., why liver cells have many mitochondria).

Interactive 3D Animal Cell

Explore the complete animal cell in three dimensions. Rotate to view any angle, click each organelle to learn its structure and function, and use Guided Tour to step through all 9 major components.

Mitochondria: The Powerhouse

Mitochondria are double-membraned organelles responsible for producing ATP through cellular respiration. The inner membrane is folded into cristae, greatly increasing the surface area for oxidative phosphorylation. Each cell may contain hundreds to thousands of mitochondria depending on its energy demands.

Cellular Respiration Equation

C₆H₁₂O₆ + 6O₂ → 6CO₂ + 6H₂O + 36–38 ATP

Key Organelles and Their Functions

Summary table of the major organelles found in animal cells.

OrganelleStructurePrimary Function
NucleusDouble-membrane envelope with poresStores DNA; controls gene expression
MitochondriaDouble membrane, cristae insideProduces ATP via cellular respiration
RibosomesTwo protein-rRNA subunitsSynthesises proteins
Endoplasmic ReticulumNetwork of membranes (rough/smooth)Protein & lipid synthesis and transport
Golgi ApparatusStack of flattened membrane sacsProcesses, packages, and ships proteins
LysosomeSingle membrane vesicleIntracellular digestion using enzymes
CentrosomeTwo centrioles at right anglesOrganises spindle fibres during cell division
Cell MembranePhospholipid bilayer with proteinsControls entry and exit of substances

Biochemistry Bridge

Mitochondria connect directly to HSC Chemistry: the electron transport chain uses redox reactions to pump H⁺ ions across the inner membrane, creating a proton gradient that drives ATP synthase — an application of electrochemical principles studied in Chemistry Chapter 3.

Endoplasmic Reticulum and Golgi Apparatus

The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is a network of membranous tunnels extending from the nucleus. Rough ER is studded with ribosomes and manufactures secretory proteins. Smooth ER synthesises lipids and detoxifies chemicals. The Golgi apparatus receives proteins from rough ER, modifies them (e.g., adding carbohydrate chains), and packages them into vesicles for export or internal use.

InstaTest

InstaTest: Organelle Functions

Test your understanding of organelle functions with a 5-question MCQ sprint before moving to the next section.

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