Every cell in your body contains identical DNA — yet a neuron looks nothing like a red blood cell. How does one genome produce hundreds of different cell types, and why does structure always follow function?
Content from this lesson that appears directly in HSC Biology exams
Describing specialised cells and linking structural features to function. Appears in almost every HSC paper — typically 3–6 marks in Section II.
Explaining how identical DNA produces different cell types. Frequently tested as a 4–6 mark extended response in Section II.
Deducing cell function from organelle content shown in images. Common in Section I multiple choice (1 mark) and short responses (2–3 marks).
Not directly tested in Module 2 but essential background for Year 12 Module 7 (Infectious Disease) and Module 8 (Non-infectious Disease).
Core Content
Same DNA · Different gene expression · Different cell types
If every cell in your body has the same DNA, why don't you grow hair on your eyeballs? Because the genes for hair production are permanently switched off in corneal cells. This selective gene expression — switching specific genes on and off — is what allows one genome to build an entire human being. It is one of the most profound concepts in biology.
Every cell in a multicellular organism contains exactly the same DNA — approximately 20,000 genes in humans. But no single cell uses all of them at once. Cell differentiation is the process by which a cell becomes structurally and functionally specialised by selectively activating certain genes while permanently silencing others.
This is controlled by chemical signals during development. Once differentiation is complete, the cell's gene expression pattern is largely locked in — a muscle cell does not spontaneously become a nerve cell.
| Stem Cell Type | Potency | Location | Can Become |
|---|---|---|---|
| Totipotent | Highest | Fertilised egg, first few divisions | Any cell type including placenta |
| Pluripotent | Very high | Early embryo (inner cell mass) | Any body cell type (not placenta) |
| Multipotent | Moderate | Bone marrow, gut lining, skin | A limited range of related cell types |
| Unipotent | Lowest | Muscle tissue, liver | Only one specific cell type |
The structural logic of division of labour
Cell specialisation is the structural consequence of division of labour. When a cell commits permanently to a single function, it can modify its entire architecture to perform that function with maximum efficiency. A generalised cell that tries to do everything will do nothing particularly well.
The core principle that underpins all HSC responses on this topic is: structure determines function. Every structural feature of a specialised cell exists because it improves performance of that cell's specific role. Naming a structure is never enough — you must explain what it enables and how.
Eight cell types examined at the organelle level
| Cell | Structural Features | Function Enabled — and Why |
|---|---|---|
| Red blood cell (erythrocyte) |
No nucleus or organelles Biconcave disc shape Packed with haemoglobin Flexible plasma membrane |
No nucleus → maximises internal volume for haemoglobin → increased O₂ carrying capacity Biconcave shape → increases SA:V ratio → faster gas diffusion across membrane Flexibility → allows deformation to squeeze through narrow capillaries |
| Neuron (nerve cell) |
Many branching dendrites Long axon (up to 1 m) Myelin sheath around axon Synaptic terminals with vesicles |
Dendrites → large surface area to receive signals from many neurons Long axon → transmits signals over large distances within the body Myelin sheath → insulates axon → dramatically increases signal speed (saltatory conduction) Vesicles → store and release neurotransmitters at synapses |
| Muscle cell (myocyte) |
Elongated shape Packed with myofilaments (actin + myosin) Many mitochondria Multiple nuclei (skeletal muscle) |
Elongated shape → allows shortening along its length to generate contraction Myofilaments → slide past each other to produce force Many mitochondria → supply ATP for continuous contraction Multiple nuclei → coordinate protein synthesis across the long cell volume |
| Goblet cell |
Cup (goblet) shape Packed with mucin granules Prominent Golgi apparatus Sits among ciliated epithelial cells |
Cup shape → accumulates a large volume of mucus before secretion Mucin granules → released to form mucus that traps pathogens and particles Golgi apparatus → packages and processes mucin proteins for secretion Location alongside cilia → mucus is then swept upward, clearing the airway |
| Sperm cell (spermatozoon) |
Streamlined head with acrosome Midpiece packed with mitochondria Long flagellum (tail) Minimal cytoplasm |
Acrosome → contains enzymes that digest the egg's outer membrane to allow entry Mitochondria in midpiece → produce ATP directly where it is needed for flagellar movement Flagellum → propels the cell toward the egg Minimal cytoplasm → reduces mass → increases motility |
| Cell | Structural Features | Function Enabled — and Why |
|---|---|---|
| Palisade mesophyll cell |
Elongated columnar shape 40–50 chloroplasts per cell Positioned at top of leaf Thin cell walls |
Columnar shape → maximises surface area exposed to incoming light Dense chloroplasts → maximises light capture per cell for photosynthesis Top position → light reaches this layer before being absorbed lower down Thin walls → minimises diffusion distance for CO₂ entering the cell |
| Root hair cell |
Long thin tubular extension (root hair) Large central vacuole No chloroplasts Thin cell wall |
Root hair → increases surface area up to 10× for water and mineral absorption Large vacuole → maintains osmotic gradient driving water uptake by osmosis No chloroplasts → underground, no light available; producing them would waste energy Thin wall → reduces diffusion distance for water and minerals entering the cell |
| Guard cell |
Kidney (bean) shape Thick inner wall, thin outer wall Contains chloroplasts Ion-sensitive water potential |
Unequal wall thickness → when turgid, the cell bows outward opening the stoma; when flaccid, it closes Chloroplasts → provide ATP via photosynthesis for active ion pumping Ion pumping → changes water potential → controls turgor → regulates stomatal aperture for gas exchange |
In your book, draw and annotate: red blood cell (side view — biconcave shape), neuron (full structure including axon and dendrites), palisade mesophyll cell (with chloroplasts and position in leaf), root hair cell (with hair extension and vacuole). For every label, add a function note.
Reading a cell's function from its internal structures
NESA frequently presents students with electron micrograph images or organelle descriptions of unfamiliar cells and asks them to deduce function. The pattern is consistent: cells that perform a particular function in large quantities have disproportionately large numbers of the organelle that supports that function.
| Many of this organelle... | Suggests the cell... | Cell example |
|---|---|---|
| Mitochondria | Has high ATP demand — is highly active | Muscle cells, sperm midpiece, active transport cells |
| Ribosomes | Produces large quantities of protein | Pancreatic cells (enzymes/insulin), goblet cells (mucin) |
| Rough ER + Golgi | Synthesises, processes and secretes proteins | Goblet cells, plasma cells (antibodies) |
| Chloroplasts | Performs photosynthesis | Palisade mesophyll, guard cells |
| Large central vacuole | Maintains turgor / stores water or solutes | Root hair cells, plant storage cells |
| Lysosomes | Digests foreign material or cellular debris | Macrophages, phagocytic white blood cells |
An electron micrograph shows an unidentified cell with: elongated shape, mitochondria concentrated at one end near a long whip-like projection, a membrane-capped structure at the opposite end, and very little cytoplasm. What is it?
Step 1 — List the clues: long shape, whip-like projection, mitochondria near the projection, membrane cap at the head, minimal cytoplasm.
Step 2 — Interpret each clue: whip-like projection = flagellum (motility); mitochondria near flagellum = ATP supplied where needed; membrane cap = acrosome (enzyme storage for egg penetration); minimal cytoplasm = reduced mass for speed.
Step 3 — Conclude: This is a sperm cell. Every structural feature supports a single function: reaching and fertilising an egg.
Similarities are just as examinable as differences
| Feature | Red Blood Cell | Neuron | Palisade Mesophyll | Root Hair Cell |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nucleus | No (lost on maturation) | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Mitochondria | No | Yes (many) | Yes | Yes |
| Chloroplasts | No | No | Yes (many) | No |
| Cell wall | No | No | Yes (cellulose) | Yes (cellulose) |
| Shape adaptation | Biconcave → SA:V | Long axon → distance | Columnar → light | Hair extension → absorption |
| Primary function | O₂ transport | Signal transmission | Photosynthesis | Water/mineral uptake |
| Shared by all | Cell membrane · Cytosol · Ribosomes · DNA · Perform cellular respiration | |||
Activities
In your book, draw fully labelled diagrams of a red blood cell and a palisade mesophyll cell. For each labelled structure, add a brief annotation explaining its function. Then answer the written question below.
Type your written responses here or answer in your book.
Four mystery cells are described below. For each one: identify the most likely cell type, state its primary function, and explain how two structural features support your identification.
| Cell | Organelle Description | Identification | Two Supporting Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cell A | Enormous numbers of ribosomes and rough ER; prominent Golgi apparatus; no chloroplasts | ||
| Cell B | No nucleus; no mitochondria; biconcave disc shape; densely packed with an iron-containing protein | ||
| Cell C | Many branching dendrites at one end; a single very long axon covered in a myelin sheath; synaptic vesicles at the terminal end; many mitochondria | ||
| Cell D | Has a cell wall; 40+ chloroplasts; elongated columnar shape; positioned near the surface of a flat structure exposed to sunlight |
| Organelle | Liver cell (hepatocyte) | Skeletal muscle cell | Mature red blood cell |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mitochondria | ~1,000–2,000 | ~1,000–2,000 | 0 |
| Ribosomes | ~13,000,000 | Moderate | 0 |
| Lysosomes | ~300 | Few | 0 |
| Nucleus | 1 | Multiple (50–100) | 0 |
| Rough ER | Extensive | Moderate | None |
Type here or answer in your book.
Assessment
Select the best answer — feedback shown immediately
1. Cell differentiation occurs because:
2. Which structural feature of a red blood cell directly increases its efficiency at gas exchange?
3. A cell has an unusually high number of mitochondria and is packed with actin and myosin proteins. This cell is most likely a:
4. Root hair cells lack chloroplasts. The best explanation is:
5. Which observation best demonstrates that differentiation is based on gene expression rather than gene content?
Write in the format shown in the model answers — structure your response for HSC marking
6. Explain the process of cell differentiation. Refer to gene expression, stem cells, and the role of chemical signals. 3 MARKS
7. Select one animal cell and one plant cell. For each, describe two structural features and explain how each feature enables the cell's function. 4 MARKS
Use the format: [structural feature] → [function] → because [mechanism]
8. A scientist examines an unknown cell with: a very long shape, mitochondria concentrated near a whip-like projection, an acrosome at the opposite end, and minimal cytoplasm. Identify the cell, justify your identification using the structural evidence, and explain how each feature relates to the cell's function. 3 MARKS
1. C — Differentiation results from identical DNA being expressed differently. Cells do not lose or mutate DNA during differentiation.
2. A — The biconcave shape increases SA:V ratio, maximising membrane surface for O₂ and CO₂ diffusion. No nucleus, no mitochondria, no cell wall.
3. D — High mitochondria = high ATP demand; actin and myosin are the contractile proteins of muscle cells exclusively.
4. B — Gene expression is regulated by function and environment. Underground = no light = no photosynthesis possible. Producing chloroplasts would waste energy for no benefit.
5. C — A red blood cell that discarded its nucleus developed from a cell with the complete genome. Absence of nucleus reflects a gene expression choice made during differentiation, not absence of the relevant genes.
Cell differentiation is the process by which unspecialised cells become permanently specialised through selective gene expression.
It begins with stem cells — undifferentiated cells containing the full genome and capable of dividing and differentiating into many cell types.
Chemical signals in the cell's environment activate specific transcription factors, which switch particular genes on while permanently silencing others.
The result is cells with identical DNA that produce different proteins, develop different structures, and perform different functions. Once differentiation is complete, this gene expression pattern is largely fixed.
Animal cell — Neuron:
• Feature 1: Long axon (up to 1 m) → enables transmission of electrical signals over large distances → because the axon physically bridges distant parts of the nervous system that could not otherwise communicate via diffusion alone.
• Feature 2: Myelin sheath surrounding the axon → dramatically increases signal conduction speed → because its insulating properties force the electrical impulse to jump between gaps (nodes of Ranvier), a process called saltatory conduction.
Plant cell — Palisade mesophyll cell:
• Feature 1: High density of chloroplasts (40–50 per cell) → maximises the rate of photosynthesis → because each chloroplast captures light energy independently, and their density means significantly more light is absorbed per unit time.
• Feature 2: Positioned at the top of the leaf → maximises light availability → because light intensity decreases as it passes through successive cell layers, so the top position ensures maximum light reaches the photosynthetic cells before it is absorbed or scattered.
This cell is a sperm cell (spermatozoon).
• The whip-like projection is a flagellum → enables motility → because wave-like movements generated by dynein motor proteins propel the cell toward the egg.
• Mitochondria concentrated near the flagellum (midpiece) → supply ATP directly where it is consumed → because ATP must be produced close to the flagellum's motor proteins to enable continuous movement.
• The acrosome at the head → contains hydrolytic enzymes → that are released on contact with the egg, enabling penetration of the zona pellucida for fertilisation.
• Minimal cytoplasm → reduces cell mass → increasing motility efficiency.
Tick when you've finished all activities and checked your answers.