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Getting More Complex: Eukaryotes
A revolutionary moment in Earth's history happened when cells learned to work together in a way that created complexity. In this lesson, your learner will discover eukaryotes. These are cells with special parts inside that do different jobs. These more organized cells became the building blocks for plants, animals, fungi, and eventually you. It's the story of how cells got more complex and how that complexity opened up entirely new possibilities for life.
- Over time, some cells became more complex and developed special parts inside.
- These complex cells are called eukaryotes and have a nucleus that holds the cell's instructions.
- The nucleus acts like a command center, organizing how the cell works.
- Endosymbiosis explains how eukaryotes formed: one cell absorbed another and they partnered together.
- Mitochondria (and chloroplasts in plants) were once free-living bacteria that became part of larger cells.
- Plants, animals, fungi, and even you are made of eukaryotic cells!
- DK's Science as You've Never Seen it Before: pg. 142-143
- Mammoth Science: Cells pg. 38
- Visual Timelines: Life on Earth pg. 16
- Alternative
| ✏️ Notebooking Activity Label the different parts of an animal cell. Make sure to include the nucleus. Then answer: which organelles would a plant cell have that an animal cell does NOT have? There is also a second notebooking page option: create a comic strip detailing the endosymbiosis theory and how we might have ended up with mitochondria. |
We cross into November. Read the script below before the lesson.
Read aloud: We’ve crossed into November on our Cosmic Calendar. It took almost two full months from the first life in late September to get here, and that’s a reminder of how long single-celled life ruled this planet before anything more complex came along. November 9th marks the appearance of eukaryotes, cells with a true nucleus. In real time, about 2 billion years ago. This was a major turning point. For billions of years, life was simple. Then cells figured out how to have a command center, a nucleus to store and protect their genetic information. That change opened the door to everything that comes after. Every animal, every plant, every fungus you’ve ever seen is made of eukaryotic cells. November 9th. Quiet, microscopic, and one of the most important days on this entire calendar.
- What makes a eukaryotic cell different from a simpler prokaryotic cell?
Sample answer: Eukaryotic cells have a nucleus, a special compartment that holds the cell's instructions, plus other specialized structures called organelles. - What does the nucleus do inside a cell?
Sample answer: It acts like a command center, storing the cell's DNA and controlling how the cell grows and works. - Can you name a living thing made of eukaryotic cells?
Sample answer: Plants, animals, fungi, and humans are all made of eukaryotic cells. - What is the endosymbiotic theory, and what does it explain?
Sample answer: It's the idea that mitochondria (and chloroplasts) were once free-living bacteria that got absorbed by larger cells—they formed a partnership that benefited both and led to more complex cells.
- Why is the development of the nucleus such a major step in evolution?
Sample answer: A nucleus protected DNA, allowing more complex genetic instructions. Without it, cells couldn't specialize or form multicellular organisms. - How do mitochondria show evidence of their bacterial origin?
Sample answer: Mitochondria have their own DNA, their own inner membranes, and they divide independently inside cells, all signs that they were once free-living bacteria.
- Eukaryote — An organism whose cells have a membrane-bound nucleus and specialized organelles; includes all plants, animals, fungi, and protists.
- Nucleus — The control center of a eukaryotic cell; contains the cell's DNA and directs cell activity.
- Organelle — A specialized structure inside a eukaryotic cell that performs a specific function, like the nucleus or mitochondria.
- Mitochondria — Organelles that produce energy for the cell by converting food into usable power; the 'powerhouse of the cell.'
- Endosymbiosis — The theory that some organelles were once free-living bacteria absorbed into larger cells, forming a partnership over time.
- Cell Membrane — The flexible outer boundary of a cell that controls what enters and exits, protecting the cell and its contents.
- DNA — The molecule that carries genetic instructions for building, operating, and reproducing all living things.
- Grypania spiralis— One of the oldest known eukaryotes; a coiled, ribbon-like algae from 2.1 billion years ago.
- Paramecium— A familiar single-celled eukaryote; a great modern example of how complex a single cell can be.
- Amoeba— A single-celled eukaryote that moves and eats by changing shape; a living window into early eukaryotic life.
- Euglena— A single-celled eukaryote with both plant-like and animal-like features; shows how life’s categories can blur.
- Volvox— A green algae that forms hollow spheres of cells. This is a beautiful example of the transition toward multicellular life.
Videos:
Lynn Margulis and the Eukaryotic Cells | AMS OpenMind
The Complicated Legacy of Lynn Margulis
Chromosome (24) mtDNA - Lynn Margulis and the mitochondrial DNA
Digging Deeper Activity:
Look up a diagram of a mitochondrion. What features does it share with free-living bacteria? What does this physical evidence tell us about Margulis’s theory? Write a short explanation of endosymbiosis as if you were explaining it to a younger child.
- Britannica Kids. (n.d.). Eukaryote. https://kids.britannica.com/students/article/eukaryote/322731
- National Geographic Society. (n.d.). Cell theory. National Geographic Education. https://education.nationalgeographic.org/resource/cell-theory/
- Amoeba Sisters. (2017, May 4). Endosymbiotic theory [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FGnS-Xk0ZqU
- Amoeba Sisters. (2018, July 30). Prokaryotic vs. eukaryotic cells (updated) [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pxujitlv8wc
- University of California Museum of Paleontology. (n.d.). Evidence for endosymbiosis. Understanding Evolution. https://evolution.berkeley.edu/it-takes-teamwork-how-endosymbiosis-changed-life-on-earth/evidence-for-endosymbiosis/
- OpenMind. (2023, November 21). Lynn Margulis and the eukaryotic cells | AMS OpenMind [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nq5rSGGxKVk