Cells are like tiny living factories that perform different jobs to keep organisms alive and healthy.
Just like a busy city needs different buildings and workers to function properly, cells have specialized parts that work together to keep living things going. Each cell is like a miniature city with various departments (organelles) that handle specific tasks such as producing energy, getting rid of waste, and making new materials. Understanding cell functions helps us know how living things survive and grow.
Cells make energy like a power plant. The mitochondria (power stations) take food and oxygen and turn them into usable energy, just like how a kitchen converts ingredients into ready-to-eat meals.
Cells move materials in and out, similar to how a post office handles mail. The cell membrane acts like a security guard, deciding what can enter and leave, while proteins work like delivery trucks moving things around inside.
Cells can make copies of themselves and fix damaged parts, like a construction crew building new houses or repairing old ones. They use proteins as building blocks, following instructions from DNA blueprints.
Cells clean themselves by breaking down and removing unwanted materials, like a city's waste management system. Special organelles called lysosomes work as garbage disposal units.