In this video, we're going to talk about prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. Prokaryotic and eukaryotic are actually the broadest and the most distinct groupings of all life. The reason for this is that prokaryotic cells actually include two different domains of life. It includes both Domain Bacteria and Domain Archaea as well. Both bacteria and archaea are considered prokaryotic. Prokaryotic cells specifically do not have an organelle called a nucleus, meaning prokaryotic cells do not have a nucleus. Whereas, eukaryotic cells, on the other hand, these cells do have a nucleus along with other membrane-bound organelles.
What you'll notice is in prokaryotic and eukaryotic, comparing the two words, they both have this "karyo" root, which refers to the kernel of the cell, which is the nucleus. The "karyo" root is found in both of these words. So both of them are referring to the nucleus. What's different are the roots "pro" and "eu". "Pro" is a root that means "before." Hence "prokaryotic" which means "before the nucleus," referring to not having the nucleus because it's "before the presence of a nucleus." The "eu" prefix means "good," and together with ""karyote,"" it forms "good nucleus," indicating that it does have a good nucleus or just the nucleus. This can help you distinguish between prokaryotic and eukaryotic a bit better.
Below, we're going to take a look at this table here of prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. Notice that the table has these column headers: the Domains of Life, Cell Type, Nucleus, Organelles, Cell Size, and Cellularity. For the Domains of Life, there are three domains: Domain Bacteria, Domain Archaea, and Domain Eukarya. Both bacteria and archaea are the same cell type of prokaryotic because, in terms of the nucleus, both bacteria and archaea do not have a nucleus, meaning the nucleus is absent. On the other hand, Eukarya are going to be eukaryotic cells, and eukaryotic cells specifically do have a nucleus. So here, we can say that the nucleus is present. In terms of other membrane-bound organelles, prokaryotic cells, including bacteria and archaea, do not have membrane-bound organelles, so they will be absent here. But, of course, in eukaryotic cells, organelles are going to be present.
Moving forward in our course, we'll talk about a lot of these different types of organelles found in eukaryotic cells. Now again, in terms of cell size, it's really important to note that prokaryotic cells are significantly smaller than eukaryotic cells, which are significantly larger. Prokaryotic cells can range in size, but they're going to be about 1 micrometer in diameter. Whereas, eukaryotic cells, which can also range in their sizes, are going to be much larger on average. So here, we have a 100 micrometers. Eukaryotic cells can be up to a hundred times larger than prokaryotic cells in some cases. In terms of cellularity, it's important to note that prokaryotic cells, including bacteria and archaea, are unicellular, meaning that they're only made up of one single cell because "uni" means one or singular. Whereas, eukaryotic cells can either be unicellular or single-celled or they can be multicellular. The multicellular organisms that you're aware of are all going to be eukaryotic, and this is where humans fall as we are multicellular. This here concludes our introduction to prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells, and we'll be able to continue to talk more and more about the differences between the two as we move forward in our course. I'll see you all in our next video.