Pharmacognosy L02
Pharmacognosy L02
Pharmacognosy L02
• Plant and animal cells are both eukaryotic cells, so they have
many common features, such as the presence of a cell
membrane, cytoplasm, and cell organelles, e.g. the nucleus,
mitochondria, Golgi apparatus, endoplasmic reticulum, and
ribosomes.
Differences between animal and plant cells
Items Animal Cell Plant Cell
Cell wall Absent Present (formed of
cellulose)
Plasma (or Cell) Only plasma membrane Cell wall and a plasma
Membrane membrane
Shape Round or irregular shape Rectangular (fixed shape)
Vacuole One or more small One, large central vacuole
vacuoles (smaller than taking up 90% of cell
plant cells) volume
Centrioles Present in all animal cells Only present in lower
plants
Chloroplasts Absent Present
Plastids Absent Present
Lysosomes occur in cytoplasm usually not evident
Cilia Present Mostly absent
Structure of the plant cell:
Plant Cell
All the contents within the cell wall Non-living permeable layer
Protoplasmic Non-protoplasmic
(living) (non-living)
components components
1- Plant Cell Wall:
• A major difference between plant and animal cells is that the plant cell is
surrounded by a rigid cell wall which acts for support and protection, mostly
made of polysaccharides (cellulose, hemicellulose, pectin) and lignin. Animal
cells do not have a cell wall.
• Plants have two types of cell walls, primary and secondary, together with the
middle lamella:
1- Primary wall:
• It is formed early in the life of the plant cell.
• Primary cell walls are thin and characteristic of young, growing cells but
become rigid as the cell ages.
They are internally deposited upon the primary wall when most cell
enlargement has ended.
Only certain types of plant cells have secondary walls, usually those
specialized for support, protection, or water conduction.
• They are permeable to water and gases, and give blue colour with chlor-
zinc-iodide.
B- Mucilagenous walls:
• Certain cellulosic cell walls may be converted into mucilage such as in the
epidermal cells of many plants, e.g. Linseed, Foenugreek, and Senna.
• They are hard when dry but become soft and swell up when moistened
with water.
• They are stained blue with methylene blue (for neutral mucilage) and red
with ruthenium red and corallin soda (for acidic mucilage).
C- Lignified walls :
• Lignin is a strengthening material that increases the rigidity of cell walls.
• They are permeable to water but don't retain appreciable amounts of it.
• They are stained red wiht phloroglucinol and conc. hydrolchloric acid,
and yellow with chlor-zinc-iodide.
• Suberin occurs in cork cells, while cutin covers the epidermal cells of
leaves for protection.
• Both types are stained red with alkanna tincture and sudan III reagent.
E- Chitinous walls:
• Chitin is a polysaccharide containing acetyl and amino groups.
• When heated with 50% potash at 160-170 °C for one hour, it is converted
• Chitosan gives a deep violet colour when treated with iodine solution
cell organelles.
include the vacuole and ergastic substances (reserve food material and other
a) Cytoplasm:
A viscous transparent substance composed of water (up to 90%) in which
proteins, organic acids, and inorganic substances are dispersed.
The (ER) lumen of one cell is connected to adjacent cells via plasmodesma.
There are two types of (ER), smooth and rough, which are interconnected.
b) Nucleus:
The nucleus is spherical and more viscous than the cytoplasm.
The nucleus carries the heredity characters, used in cell division, and
controls all the metabolic activities inside the cells.
Nucleus is the site of storage and replication of chromosomes, which are
composed of DNA and its associated proteins. The DNA-protein complex is
known as chromatin.
Types of plastids:
4) Each mass is called granum. The region of the chloroplast that is inside the
inner membrane and surrounds thylakoids is known as the stroma.
d) Mitochondria:
Rod-shaped cytoplasmic organelles representing the site of ATP synthesis.
They are surrounded by two membranes; the outer is smooth and the inner
is highly folded. These folds of the inner membrane are called "cristae" that
increase the inner surface area on which the enzymes of respiration occur.
• They are flattened membranes with vesicles at their ends and surrounded
by a double membrane.
f) Lysosomes:
• They are structures bound by a single membrane.
• They cause autolysis of dead cells as they contain hydrolytic enzymes which
are used in breakdown of proteins and other macromolecules.
Non-protoplasmic components:
a) Central vacuoles:
Mature plant cells contain a large, water-filled central vacuole (usually one
or two).
The central vacuole can occupy 80-90% of the cell and is surrounded by a
vacuolar membrane.
Vacuoles also have a storage function and provide rigidity to the plant cell.
They include the reserved food materials (primary metabolites) and the other
secondary metabolites.