By JV Chamary

Published: Wednesday, 18 January 2023 at 12:00 am


Given that they contain the biological molecules and machinery required by all life forms, it’s ironic that cells were named after empty spaces.

When the 17th-century polymath Robert Hooke looked down a microscope at the structure of cork, its repeating units of spaces reminded him of the sleeping quarters in a prison or monastery. Hooke called those units ‘cells’, from the Latin for ‘little rooms’.

Is all life made of cells?

It depends on how you define life! Viruses aren’t made of cells, but some biologists consider them alive. A virus can’t replicate without using a host cell, though, so we can sidestep the philosophical discussion of “What is life?” and say all life uses cells.

Life forms that are made of cells are called organisms. They’re either unicellular (single-celled) – bacteria, for example – or multicellular. Unicellular organisms must do all the work needed to sustain life, but multicellular life forms can have a body with a division of labour: different types of cell play specific roles in the organism.

What do cells have in common?

Every cell has a fatty membrane that establishes its boundary and controls which substances go in or out of its watery internal fluid, the cytoplasm. A cell will almost always contain genetic material, too.

What’s the difference between eukaryote and prokaryote cells?

The biggest distinction between cells is how they hold genetic material. In eukaryote cells, the DNA is enclosed with a ‘nut’ or envelope called the nucleus (hence eukaryote meaning ‘true nut’ in Greek). Meanwhile, in prokaryote cells – bacteria and archaea, descendants of life forms that didn’t evolve to have a nucleus – the DNA floats freely in the cytoplasm (prokaryote means ‘before nuts’ in Greek).

Eukaryote cells are more complex because they’re organised into compartments with structures known as organelles (‘little organs’) with separate functions, analogous to the organs of a body – as in energy-generating mitochondria that breathe oxygen like lungs.