- Both have DNA as their genetic material (it’s DNA that tells cells what kind of cells they should be).
- Both are covered by a cell membrane.
- Both contain RNA.
- Both are made from the same basic chemicals: carbohydrates, proteins, nucleic acid, minerals, fats and vitamins.
- Both have ribosomes (the structures on which proteins are made).
- Both regulate the flow of the nutrients and wastes that enter and leave them.
- Both have similar basic metabolism (life processes) like photosynthesis and reproduction.
- Both require a supply of energy.
age Differences
Scientists believe that prokaryotic cells (in the form of bacteria) were the first life forms on earth. They are considered “primitive” and originated about 3.5 billion years ago. That's 2 billion years earlier than eukaryotic cells and billions of years before our earliest ancestors, the hominids.
You learned a little about this when we studied Early Earth in our lesson on The Solar System, but here is a brief timeline of the development of life on Earth:
- 4.6 billion years ago the Earth was formed
- 3.5 billion years ago the first life arose: prokaryotic bacteria
- 1.5 billion years ago eukaryotic cells arose
- 0.5 billion years ago the Cambrian explosion – multi-celled eukaryotes arose
- 3 million years ago our earliest ancestors, the hominids, appeared
There is strong data to suggest that eukaryotic cells actually evolved from groups of prokaryotic cells that became interdependent on each other. You’ll be learning more about this theory later.
Estructural differences
Eukaryotic cells contain two important things that prokaryotic cells do not: a nucleus and organelles (little organs) with membranes around them.
DNA arrngament
Although both eukaryotic and prokaryotic cells contain DNA, the DNA in eukaryotic cells is held within the nucleus. In prokaryotic cells, the DNA floats freely around in a unorganized manner.
Precense of organelles
The organelles in eukaryotic cells allow them to perform more complex functions than prokaryotic cells, which don’t have these little organs. If you don’t know much about organelles.
Some of the organelles in eukaryotic cells are:
- The Nucleus – the “brain” or control center of the cell. It contains DNA, which makes up genes. That DNA gets transcribed, or copied onto messenger RNA. That messenger carries a copy of the genes orders for certain protein production. These orders go to the protein factories.
- Ribosomes– These are the protein factories. They follow instructions from messenger RNA (remember that the messenger RNA got its orders from the DNA)
- Endoplasmatic Resti(ER) – structures that modify proteins produced in the ribosomes. Not all of the proteins made by the ribosomes need changing
- Golgi apparatus– This structure will make even more changes to the proteins that already got changed when they were in the E.R. Remember those proteins were made in the ribosomes, changed once in the E.R. and will be changed again in the Golgi Apparatus.
- Mitochondria– structures which produce the cell’s energy, a.k.a. powerhouses of the cell.
- Chloroplasts – structures which allow plants to trap sunlight and carry out photosynthesis.
There are some important differences between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells.
Size
Cell wall differences
Flagella arrangament
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