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To us modern folk, we tend to take for granted the existence of cells
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and the idea that all living things are made up of cells
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that we as human beings, as living organisms, we are made up of many, many, many cells
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the estimates of the cells, of the human body, are around the order of 37 trillion cells!
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But, if we were to rewind, even 400 years ago to the 1600's
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this wasn't so obvious.
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and that is because people really didn't have the tools
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to make direct observations of cells. They didn't know that these cells were around.
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They didn't know that things, even like unicellular organisms, even existed!
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But, all of that began to change, with Robert Hooke.
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Robert Hooke, was able to leverage a primitive microscope
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and this is a picture of his microscope
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and when you see this, you appreciate how
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at least relative, to what we have today, how primitive it was.
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He had lenses here, that would provide some magnification,
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but he had to use -- this right over here -- this is a flame, and he is able to channel that light
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so that it gets reflected over whatever he is observing.
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And in, 1665, he publishes the "Micrographia".
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I am probably not pronouncing it right.
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So, this is 1665, Robert Hooke publishes this
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and in this, he describes and he draws a lot
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of his observations, using his microscope.
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He has some fascinating drawings, he was actually quite a good artist,
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where he was able to draw pictures
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of his observations, of things like lice, and fleas.
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But, it's not just lice and fleas that he is able to observe.
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He actually takes a look at some corks or what he just sees as "cork"
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and when he makes that observation, he says, "Hey look, you know there are these little squares over here, and this kind of seems to be somehow kind of a basic unit of this cork. "
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And he says, " Well, this kinda reminds me of these little rooms that monks live in and spend their time in, which we call cells".
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So he calls these cells.
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And, that is where the word comes from.
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He calls them cells, in "Micrographia".
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That is a cell.
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Now unfortunately for us, he was a great artist
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and he was really good at drawing things
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and he drew a lot in his "Micrographia", but we don't have any pictures of Robert Hooke anymore.
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And it's a fascinating story. Most theories are that
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actually, it was Isaac Newton, who burned the only original painting, that we have of Robert Hooke.
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And, that is another intriguing story, that we can talk about, at a future date.
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But, what Robert Hooke — he coined these things "cells" — but he was looking at dead tissue, and actually he was
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looking at the remnants of cells. And what he saw was really just the cell wall remnants.
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He wasn't actually able to observe, directly, "living cells". And he didn't have enough to go on
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to think , "Hey maybe, this is a building block of all life and maybe, cells themselves reproduce."
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"And, all cells come from other cells. " And that doesn't start to get developed, until we get further on into history.
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You go a few years later, we get to Antonie von Leeuwenhoek.
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I know I'm not probably pronouncing it right.
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But he was a Dutch lense crafter, and he was inspired
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by Hooke's work , and he says "Hey, I can craft lenses, maybe I can use that to make better microscopes, and make better observations. "
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And he was able to do that, and doing that he was able to directly observe
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living cells and living unicellular organisms.
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So, he was able to directly observe sperm.
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He said, "Hey this thing looks like it's alive!"
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He was able to directly observe protists — so these unicellular, eukaryotic...
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... they have cell walls, these things that look like unicellular animals.
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And he called them, actually, "animalcules".
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Saying, "Hey, look, these look like these little mini-animals going on here. "
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And so he started to say, well maybe this is some form of a basis of life, or at least started to say,
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at this very small scale, you actually have life.
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But, a fully, modern theory of the cell, doesn't really start to emerge until we get another 100-150 years, into the future.
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And, we get into the early 1800's.
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So, if we fast-forward, to the 1830's , these two gentlemen, Matthias Schleiden and Theodor Schwann, come into the picture.
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And, they are the one's that start laying the foundation
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of what we can call, "modern cell theory".
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So, modern cell theory
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And using their observations and kind of what they are able to deduce
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they said, "Hey maybe, all living things
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all life, is composed of one or more cells."
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And today, we kind of take this for granted, but this wasn't obvious.
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It wasn't obvious that all things, that this was somehow a building block for life, one or more cells.
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And then, following that if all life is composed of one or more cells,
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you can also say, that a cell, is the basic unit of life.
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Cell is basic unit of life
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And these are strong statements, that all life, if you were to get down small enough,
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you are going to come to cells, living cells, that make up that life.
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Now, this isn't our full, complete cell theory and both of these gentlemen, they knew that cells could come from other cells.
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They were able to observe cells reproducing, but, it still
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was an open question, "Hey, maybe some cells come from other cells? While others, maybe they somehow get spontaneously created ....
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... if you have the right elements and the right amount of conditions. Maybe they somehow just emerge out of nothing. "
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And, it wasn't until this kind of third tenet of modern cell theory, it wasn't until the mid 1800's that we get our third tenet of modern cell theory that gets established.
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And this is this idea that all cells come from other cells.
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All cells from other cells
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And the real father of this idea, the one that really established this,
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is this gentleman, right here, Robert Remak.
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Now sometimes, the credit for this goes to, Rudolph Virchow, right over here, but it turns out that
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he plagiarized Remak's work, so it's really Remak who deserves the bulk of the credit
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for this tenant, that all cells come from other cells.
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And once again, he wasn't the first person to say, "Hey, maybe, we will observe that some cells..
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.. come from other cells." But he said, "This is a fundamental thing, all cells, this is how they actually come about they aren't just somehow, spontaneously emerged".
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Now whenever, even in today's world, people
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see this last thing, all cells come from other cells,
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there is a natural question, " Well, there must have been a first cell or an initial set of "proto-cells ?".
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And, people aren't a hundred percent sure, but when we
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look back, at the evolution of life on earth, we think the first cells emerged about three and a half billion years ago.
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And we are not a hundred percent sure about how they emerged, but there are some theories.
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For example, we have videos on, phospholipids,
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and it turns out that, phospholipids, naturally form bi-layers
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and they can actually form, spherical membranes, that have phospholipid bi-layers.
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So, that kinda gets you a start, so that can spontaneously form.
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And, there is also, theories that maybe in the information, the machinery of cells
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maybe their ancestors, if we were to go three and a half billion years or longer ago,
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that it might have been self-replicating RNA molecules or maybe it was somehow, self-replicating proteins
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that over time, over very large, large time scales,
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were able to, start replicating themselves, have more sophisticated machinery,
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the ones that had or were approaching our modern cells, were able to reproduce more,
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were able to take advantage of more of the energy, the resources in an environment.
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So, that we eventually get to our modern cells. But, this is a fascinating question, and is still an area of research.