cellsizes
Cellsizes is a concept used to denote the characteristic size of cells within a given context. It is typically described by a linear dimension such as diameter in spherical cells or an equivalent diameter, or by volume, particularly for irregularly shaped cells. Across life, cell sizes span several orders of magnitude: bacteria commonly 0.2–2 μm in diameter; yeast around 3–10 μm; animal cells around 10–30 μm; plant cells 10–100 μm or more with large vacuoles; larger single cells include oocytes and certain neurons; red blood cells about 6–8 μm in diameter.
Cell size is governed by genetic, metabolic, and environmental factors; key concepts include the cell cycle
Common methods to estimate cellsizes include microscopy with image analysis to measure diameter; flow cytometry using
Variations in cellsizes affect metabolic rates, gene expression, and cell cycle timing. Abnormal cell sizes are
Researchers study cellsizes to understand growth control, development, and disease, and to interpret imaging data and