No. A brain cell is just one cell in a many-celled organism.
Yes a cell can be a living organism - but it would have to be one that can live by itself, performing all the functions of life, in which case it is a unicellular organism. Prokaryotes are excellent examples, with things like amoebas, bacteria (such as E.coli) etc.
Stingrays, as with most animals, have brain cells. Bacteria and cells don't, but every living organism (not including Protazoa, fungi and plants) above that have brain cells.
Life is based on the ability of cells to reproduce, or make copies of themselves. This is done by a process called cell division = one cell divides into two cells. * For one-celled organisms, cell division = reproduction; each cell division not only produces a new cell, it also produces a new organism (bacteria, protists). * For multicellular organisms (like us) cell division allows an organism to grow and develop from a single cell to trillions of cells, and also to repair and replace cells.
Yes a germ is a cingle cell organism.
Because a single cell isn't very complex. The more cells an organism has, the more it can specialize it's cells, such as all the specialized cells that make up your brain, stomach, skeleton, muscles, etc. An organism that is made up of only one cell, that one cell has to do everything that each of our specialized cells do.
You know a cell is an organism by telling if it is a prokaryote or an eukaryote. A prokaryote has no nucleus (brain), and an eukaryote does.
It is true thatÊthe DNA in the skin cell have the same sequence of bases as the DNA in the brain cell of the same organism. The sequence of the bases should be the same in all cells of an organism.
No, they are a working part to make an organism work correctly.
The cerebrum is part of the brain, so no, it is not a single-celled organism.
A brain is an organ composed of cells. An organism has different systems of organs.
The brain.
An amoeba is considered a "single cell organism" and does not have a brain.
no its the command center of any cell. basically a cell brain.
Yes a cell can be a living organism - but it would have to be one that can live by itself, performing all the functions of life, in which case it is a unicellular organism. Prokaryotes are excellent examples, with things like amoebas, bacteria (such as E.coli) etc.
Stingrays, as with most animals, have brain cells. Bacteria and cells don't, but every living organism (not including Protazoa, fungi and plants) above that have brain cells.
no, a cell is in an organism
amoeba is cell not a organism.