The Cell — Basic Unit of Life

A free interactive lesson on the cell — the basic unit of all life. Learn about the nucleus, cytoplasm, and cell membrane, and discover how plant cells differ from animal cells with a cell wall, chloroplasts, and large vacuole. Based on NCERT Class 6 Science.

Class 6 ScienceClass 6 / Grade 6Ages 8–11
Lesson
🔬 The Cell — Basic Unit of Life
Zoom in on any living thing…NYou (trillions of cells)Your fingerSkin tissueONE CELLCells are the building blocks of all life.

If you could zoom in on your finger — closer and closer — you'd eventually see tiny building blocks. These are cells. Every living thing — a blade of grass, a mushroom, an elephant, you — is made of cells. The cell is the basic unit of life.

What is a cell?

A cell is the smallest unit of life. All living things — from bacteria and amoeba to blue whales and oak trees — are made of cells. Some organisms are made of a single cell (unicellular). Others, like you, are made of trillions (multicellular). Your body contains approximately 37 trillion cells.

Cells were first seen in 1665 by Robert Hooke, who looked at cork under a microscope and saw tiny box-like structures he called "cells" because they reminded him of monks' rooms.

Parts of a cell

Every cell has three basic parts:

  • Cell membrane — a thin, flexible skin surrounding the cell. It controls what enters and leaves the cell, keeping the inside environment stable.
  • Nucleus — the control centre. It contains DNA, the complete set of instructions for building and running the cell. The nucleus controls cell division and protein production.
  • Cytoplasm — a jelly-like fluid inside the membrane. It is mostly water but contains the organelles (cell machinery) and is where most chemical reactions happen.

Plant cells vs. animal cells

Plant cells have all the same parts as animal cells, plus three extras:

  • Cell wall — a rigid outer layer outside the membrane, made of cellulose. It gives plants their structure and strength. Animal cells have no cell wall.
  • Chloroplasts — green organelles that contain chlorophyll. They capture sunlight to make food through photosynthesis. Animal cells have no chloroplasts.
  • Large central vacuole — a large fluid-filled sac that stores water and maintains cell pressure. Animal cells have only small vacuoles.

Frequently asked questions

What is the basic unit of life?

The cell is the basic unit of all living things. Every organism is made of one or more cells, and every cell comes from a pre-existing cell.

What is the function of the nucleus?

The nucleus is the control centre of the cell. It contains DNA — the genetic instructions for every process in the cell — and controls when the cell divides and what proteins it makes.

What structures are found in plant cells but not animal cells?

Cell wall (made of cellulose), chloroplasts (for photosynthesis), and a large central vacuole (for water storage). Animal cells have none of these.

How many cells are in the human body?

Approximately 37 trillion cells. Different types do different jobs — red blood cells carry oxygen, muscle cells contract, nerve cells carry signals, and so on.

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