Cells in the entire body can range from five trillion to fifty trillion that can be in different sizes. A cell is the smallest functional and structural unit of an organism.
Cells, tissues, organs, systems, whole body.
Your whole body, inside and outside, is made of cells.
none. the whole cell reproduces, either by splitting into two cells or by budding.
Yes, your whole body does.
The cells and human body are not different. The human body is what is referred to as the whole accumulation of cells. However, there can be distinctions, as non-biological items can be present in the body, and foreign objects such as pathogens are not necesarilly cells (definetely not of the host genetics)
There are three types of embryonic cells; endoderm, mesoderm, and ectoderm. In the human body there are many different types of cells, more than two. They are grouped into tissue types. We have four different tissues; connective, nervous, muscular, and epithelial. The two major groups of cell types in the human body are somatic cells and gamete cells.
The white blood cells destroy diseases while the red blood cells carry oxygen through out the body. So all in all the white cells are for you to not get sick often and the red blood cells to get oxygen to your whole body. Thanks!
there are 15 billion blood cells in your body
there are 15 billion blood cells in your body
there are approximately 100 trillion cells in our body.
Basically cells do not control rather they are part of the tissues and the tissues are part of the organ. The Cells are what makes the body part or the whole body what it is. They generate energy and they make up the whole body. The control center of the body is the brain which is made up of tissues and therefore made up of cells too.
The cells and human body are not different. The human body is what is referred to as the whole accumulation of cells. However, there can be distinctions, as non-biological items can be present in the body, and foreign objects such as pathogens are not necesarilly cells (definetely not of the host genetics)