Different cells have different appearences because they have different functions. A good rule of thumb is the "form follows function" rule.
By definition, all human cells are animal cells. Different cells look different from others, no matter the organism. A human nerve looks almost identical to a nerve from a chimp, but a human nerve looks nothing like a cell from a chimp's muscles.
No, different types of human cells have unique shapes and structures based on their functions. Cheek cells are flat and irregularly shaped because they are protective epithelial cells. Other cells in the body, such as nerve cells or muscle cells, have different shapes that suit their specific roles.
Cells look different because they have specialized structures and functions that are necessary for their specific roles in the body. Different types of cells have different shapes, sizes, and organelles that enable them to carry out their specific functions. For example, nerve cells have long extensions called axons that allow them to transmit electrical signals, while muscle cells have a unique contractile structure that enables them to generate force for movement.
YES
From my projects, (keep in mind I'm fresh out of high school biology) it's because of cell differentiation! The body creates stem cells which are cells with nothing special about them. These cells then change into the type of cell they see that they need to be through differentiation. (this may be the direct answer to the question but it doesn't hurt to know about stem cells) Different types of cells build protein for specific subsets of the DNA. The muscle cells, for example, understand that they're muscle cells and the ribosomes make the protein needed to specifically make muscles. For example: FF - muscle Qq - nerve YY - nerve pp - muscle ll - nerve If a stem cell were to change to a nerve cell, it would code for I y and q. However, if they were muscle cells, the ribosomes would code for r and f.
no because blood, nerve, bone, muscle, and the skin cells all look different. for example: blood cells look like tiny dots and muscle cells look like long stretchy lines
By definition, all human cells are animal cells. Different cells look different from others, no matter the organism. A human nerve looks almost identical to a nerve from a chimp, but a human nerve looks nothing like a cell from a chimp's muscles.
No, different types of human cells have unique shapes and structures based on their functions. Cheek cells are flat and irregularly shaped because they are protective epithelial cells. Other cells in the body, such as nerve cells or muscle cells, have different shapes that suit their specific roles.
Cells look different because they have specialized structures and functions that are necessary for their specific roles in the body. Different types of cells have different shapes, sizes, and organelles that enable them to carry out their specific functions. For example, nerve cells have long extensions called axons that allow them to transmit electrical signals, while muscle cells have a unique contractile structure that enables them to generate force for movement.
YES
Both onion cells and nerve cells have the same look. Obviously they have both got cells in them and have nerly everything the same.
From my projects, (keep in mind I'm fresh out of high school biology) it's because of cell differentiation! The body creates stem cells which are cells with nothing special about them. These cells then change into the type of cell they see that they need to be through differentiation. (this may be the direct answer to the question but it doesn't hurt to know about stem cells) Different types of cells build protein for specific subsets of the DNA. The muscle cells, for example, understand that they're muscle cells and the ribosomes make the protein needed to specifically make muscles. For example: FF - muscle Qq - nerve YY - nerve pp - muscle ll - nerve If a stem cell were to change to a nerve cell, it would code for I y and q. However, if they were muscle cells, the ribosomes would code for r and f.
No, different cells in the body have unique structures and functions based on their specific roles. For example, skin cells are different from nerve cells in both appearance and function. Each cell type is specialized to perform specific tasks within the body.
"I am not sure of names but i know that many cells make up the heart! Try to look on the Internet for your answer. Hope this helped a bit :)" You got to be kidding me... that wasn't helpful at all, but whatever. In the heart you can find: - Myocardiocytes - those are the cells performing the rhytmic contraction of the whole heart. - Endothelial cells - those are the supporting epithelial cells, insulating the chambers of the heart and the veins.
They are made to function in different ways. A blood cell is round and smooth because it has to slip and slide through veins. It does not look like a nerve cell that has long rod looking things coming off of it because a nerve cell is not made to do the job of a blood cell.
Both onion cells and nerve cells have the same look. Obviously they have both got cells in them and have nerly everything the same.
all cells look alike because cells reproduce through cell division, which tranports the DNA from one cell and identically makes the new cell have the exact same DNA as the parent cell