Humans, like all multicellular organisms, have many different cells that do many different things. You have red blood cells to carry oxygen, white blood cells to fight off disease, muscle cells to move your body and organs, bone cells to support your weight, nerve cells to transmit messages throughout your body ... in short, there's just not one type of cells that "do" one thing.
it has more human cells actually the human body has more bacterial cells. Although it may seem more likely that the human body would have more human cells than bacterial cells. -Vasillisa
None really as human cells are animals cells.
Human cells get water from capillaries.
No, eukaryote describes human cells.
how are cells and human body different
Animal cells and human cells are essentially the same with little differences
There are ten to fifty trillion cells in the human body.
Human somatic cells are diploid, 2n. Human sex cells are haploid, n. Thus, the ploidy of human cells is 2, while n=23.
Human nerve cells are eukaryotic cells, just like every other human cell.
All cells are smaller than human(except when you're comparing a chicken egg to an embryo)
The human body is composed of cells.
all cells die. when human skin cells die, for example, they are shed and we call it dust.