Your red blood cells carry the stored energy from your food to your cells for use. Food is not directly carried to your cells.
The difference between cells, tissues, organs, and body systems are that many cells make tissues, many tissues make organs, and many organs make body systems.
Cells, tissues, organs, systems, whole body.
Cells and organs have a closely interconnected and interdependent relationship in the human body known as symbiosis. Cells make up tissues, which in turn make up organs. Organs work together to perform specific functions necessary for the body's survival. Cells rely on organs for a suitable environment to carry out their specialized functions, while organs depend on the coordinated activity of cells to perform their roles effectively. This mutualistic relationship ensures the overall functioning and health of the body.
no. a kidney is not composed of body cells. but liver, sperm, and a single bone are composed of body cells. :)
Yes, the kidney is composed of body cells. In fact, all of our organs and internal parts are composed of different body cells.
Food is broken down into particles which go into your mitochondria (in your cells), which convert the particles into energy.
the digestive cells are the small particles in our body. know we have 200,000 cells in our body that give us energy keep us alive.
The difference between cells, tissues, organs, and body systems are that many cells make tissues, many tissues make organs, and many organs make body systems.
Cells, tissues, organs, systems, whole body.
sponges have no cells which means no tissues and that means no organs because of what the cycle is there would not be any organs in the body of a sponge
It is energy for our body's cells, that is broken down by the cells when energy is needed.
"They all have something to do with cells." hope this helped (:
Chemical energy lies within the food that organisms eat. Digestion turns the chemical energy into mechanical energy, which can be used to fuel the organs, tissues and cells.
Body cells compose tissues which compose organs which compose systems.
what might happen if the human body did not have specialized cells tissue organs and organ systems to maintain homeostasis
The blood cells, stomach, and brain do.
Cells and organs have a closely interconnected and interdependent relationship in the human body known as symbiosis. Cells make up tissues, which in turn make up organs. Organs work together to perform specific functions necessary for the body's survival. Cells rely on organs for a suitable environment to carry out their specialized functions, while organs depend on the coordinated activity of cells to perform their roles effectively. This mutualistic relationship ensures the overall functioning and health of the body.