The big idea: A specialized cell is a cell whose structure has been altered to do one particular job really well.
In a multicellular organism, cells differentiate — they switch on different genes — so that each cell type ends up with a shape and contents that suit its function.
The single rule that runs through this whole topic: structure follows function. If you can see (or are told) a cell's feature, you can work out the job it does — and vice versa.
Six specialized cells — each card names the cell, shows its shape, and gives the adaptation that suits its job. The shape always follows the function.
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- Specialized cell
- A cell with a structure adapted to carry out a particular function efficiently (for example a red blood cell adapted to carry oxygen).
- Differentiation
- The process by which an unspecialized cell becomes a particular specialized cell type, by expressing (switching on) a specific set of its genes.
- Adaptation
- A structural feature of a cell that makes its function easier or more efficient (for example microvilli that increase surface area).
- Structure–function relationship
- The idea that a cell's shape and contents (its structure) match the job it has to do (its function).
- Surface area to volume ratio
- How much surface a cell has compared with its volume. Features that increase surface area (folds, projections) speed up exchange and absorption.
How to read any specialized cell: For every specialized cell, ask two questions:
1. What is unusual about its structure? (its shape, what it contains, what it lacks)
2. How does that feature make its job easier?
Linking those two is exactly what the exam rewards — never describe a structure without saying the function it serves.
Each specialized cell has a feature that fits its job. The skill is to pair each structural feature with the function it makes possible — cause to effect.
Work through the table below the same way the examiner marks it: name the feature, then state what it lets the cell do.
| Specialized cell | Structural feature (what you see) | Function it makes possible |
|---|---|---|
| Red blood cell | Biconcave disc shape; no nucleus; packed with haemoglobin | Large surface area and more room for haemoglobin → carries lots of oxygen |
| Intestine lining cell | Microvilli (folds) on its surface; many mitochondria | Large surface area and energy (ATP) → absorbs digested nutrients quickly |
| Sperm cell | Tail (flagellum); many mitochondria in the mid-piece | Energy and a tail → swims to reach and fertilise the egg |
| Neuron (nerve cell) | Very long fibre (axon) | Carries electrical impulses over long distances in the body |
| Root hair cell | Long, thin projection out into the soil | Large surface area → absorbs water and minerals efficiently |
| Palisade mesophyll cell | Column shape near the upper leaf surface; packed with chloroplasts | Catches the most light → carries out most of the leaf's photosynthesis |
Three of the most-tested cells: Red blood cell — biconcave and has no nucleus, so it is packed with haemoglobin and has a large surface area → carries the most oxygen.
Intestine lining cell — covered in microvilli (tiny folds) and full of mitochondria → a huge surface area and plenty of energy to absorb nutrients quickly.
Sperm cell — has a tail and many mitochondria → energy to swim to the egg.
Relative size matters too: Examiners also test relative size. Most body cells are tiny (about 10–30 µm), but the egg cell (ovum) is the largest human cell — it stores food reserves for the early embryo.
By contrast the sperm cell and the red blood cell are among the smallest — sperm is stripped down to swim, and red blood cells are small and flexible to fit through narrow capillaries.
| Cell | Relative size | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Egg cell (ovum) | Largest — by far the biggest human cell | Stores food reserves (yolk / cytoplasm) for the early embryo before implantation |
| Most body cells | Tiny (about 10–30 µm across) | Small size keeps a large surface-area-to-volume ratio for exchange |
| Sperm cell | Among the smallest | Stripped down to a head and a tail so it can swim quickly |
| Red blood cell | Very small (about 7 µm) | Small and flexible to squeeze through narrow capillaries |
Animal cell adaptations
- Red blood cell — biconcave + no nucleus → carries O₂
- Intestine cell — microvilli + mitochondria → absorbs nutrients
- Sperm cell — tail + mitochondria → swims to the egg
- Neuron — long axon → carries impulses far
Plant cell adaptations
- Palisade cell — packed chloroplasts near the top → photosynthesis
- Root hair cell — long projection → absorbs water and minerals
- Both increase surface area or capture light
- Plant cells specialize for making food and taking up water
A memory hook: Shape suits the job. A swimmer gets a tail, an absorber gets folds or projections (more surface area), a light-catcher gets chloroplasts, and an oxygen-carrier drops its nucleus to make room.
Big cell that feeds an embryo = the egg; small cells that move = sperm and red blood cells.
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How this is tested: The signature 2.5.5 question is a 3-mark Explain: you are shown (or told about) a specialized cell and must explain how its structure adapts it to its function.
It is a data favourite on Paper 1B: an electron micrograph is given, and you must first name the labelled cell, then read the visible adaptations off the image and link each one to a function.
The marking pattern is always feature → what it lets the cell do — one mark per correctly linked pair. A bare list of features with no function scores nothing.
IB-style question — explain a cell's adaptations to its function
A cell from the lining of the small intestine has its surface folded into many microvilli and contains a large number of mitochondria. Explain how the structure of this cell adapts it to its function of absorbing digested food. [3]
How to score all three marks
- Microvilli → surface area. The microvilli (folds) greatly increase the cell's surface area, so more nutrients can be absorbed at the same time.
- Mitochondria → energy. The many mitochondria release energy (ATP) by respiration, which powers the active transport of nutrients into the cell.
- Link to the function. Together these features let the cell absorb digested food quickly and efficiently from the gut. (Award 1 mark for each correctly linked structure→function pair, max 3.)
Final answer
Microvilli increase the surface area for absorption; many mitochondria supply the energy (ATP) for active transport of nutrients — so the cell absorbs digested food quickly and efficiently.
✓ Why this scores full marks: Each mark is a pair: a structure named and the function it serves — microvilli for surface area, mitochondria for energy.
Writing only 'it has microvilli and mitochondria' lists features but explains nothing, so it would score zero on an 'Explain how structure adapts it to function' question.
| Specialized cell | Structural feature (what you see) | Function it makes possible |
|---|---|---|
| Red blood cell | Biconcave disc shape; no nucleus; packed with haemoglobin | Large surface area and more room for haemoglobin → carries lots of oxygen |
| Intestine lining cell | Microvilli (folds) on its surface; many mitochondria | Large surface area and energy (ATP) → absorbs digested nutrients quickly |
| Sperm cell | Tail (flagellum); many mitochondria in the mid-piece | Energy and a tail → swims to reach and fertilise the egg |
| Neuron (nerve cell) | Very long fibre (axon) | Carries electrical impulses over long distances in the body |
| Root hair cell | Long, thin projection out into the soil | Large surface area → absorbs water and minerals efficiently |
| Palisade mesophyll cell | Column shape near the upper leaf surface; packed with chloroplasts | Catches the most light → carries out most of the leaf's photosynthesis |