Download specialized cell

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
2.9 SPECIALIZED CELLS
You began life as a single fertilized egg cell which underwent mitosis, creating
many daughter cells. After about 10 days some of these cells began to
DIFFERENTIATE – become different from one another. Some became your heart
cells, others your bone, nerve and skin cells to name a few!
So…. all cells start the same and then become altered to suit their role in the body
 this is called cell differentiation
SPECIALIZATION
SPECIALIZED CELL: a cell that has a particular shape/structure to perform or
complete a specific task in the body
The more complex and bigger an organism is the more specialized cells they will
need to stay healthy:
 Amobeba: single celled organism – needs only one cell to perform
all its life functions
 Glass frog: a more complex multicellular organism that needs many
specialized cells to perform all of its life functions
 The human body has more than 200 specialized cells controlled by the brain
 Each type of specialized cell has a particular shape and size, with unique
features that help it do its job
Specialized
Cells
Muscle cells
How Structure Influences Function
 Long and thin structure allows cells to change size
drastically when they contract  movement
 Some have a branching pattern that increases
muscle strength
 High concentration of mitochondria to supply
muscle cells with the energy they need to change
shape
Nerve cells
 Long threadlike branches allow them to send and
(neurons)
receive electrical signals quickly throughout the
body
Red blood cells  Doughnut shaped cells with a large surface area to
carry oxygen
 Smooth edges so they flow easily through blood
vessels
Bone cells
 Store calcium and build new bone
 Provide a framework to support and strengthen the
body
Skin cells
 Thin, flat cells that grow in layers to cover and
protect the body
Fat cells
 Store energy in the form of fat