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Transcript
Every cell has work to do. But different cells may have different jobs. In multicellular
organisms, cells with the same type of job often work together. These groups of
specialized cells form tissue. In turn, tissues often group together to form larger units,
called organs. The heart is an organ; so is the stomach.
Humans have over 200 kinds of cells.
The cells of each organ or tissue have specific jobs. In humans, for instance, different
groups of muscle cells are in charge of walking, throwing, chewing food—even blinking.
Muscle Cells
In each muscle tissue, the cells work in bundles. An arm muscle, for example, is made of
thousands of long, tube-like cells called muscle fibers. When the muscle moves, it
tightens, or contracts. Each of its muscle cells contracts, too. Muscle cells have the right
structure to contract easily.
Nerve Cells
Sending messages is the job of nerve cells, or neurons. Cordlike bundles of neurons,
called nerves, spread like branches through the body. All the branches combined form
the nervous system. It consists of billions of nerve cells.
Messages move rapidly in the nervous system. This happens in a person who suddenly
spots a fast-moving car on the street. Instantly, that person jumps back to the curb.
Some nerve messages, or impulses, travel at
300 feet (90 meters) per second.
The whole process takes just a moment. But a lot occurs during that time. Special cells
in the person's eyes pick up light rays bouncing off the car. These receptor cells translate
that information into a nerve message. Then sensory neurons carry that message to the
brain and spinal cord.
Brain neurons quickly decode the message. They send a return message to the eyes: “A
car is coming!” The brain also sends a message to neurons in the right muscles: “Get
back on the curb!” The person's legs instantly step back.
Chemicals from foods stimulate
receptor cells inside the taste buds on our tongues.
Human Blood
Without blood, we could not survive. Human blood consists of three types of cells. These
are the red blood cells, white blood cells, and the platelets. They all move around in a
watery liquid called plasma. Each type of cell has an important job to do.
Red blood cells are like delivery trucks. They drop off oxygen to all our body's cells and
remove carbon dioxide. These disk-shaped cells can squeeze through the smallest blood
vessels to reach each cell.
DID YOU KNOW?
Did you know that the mature red blood cell has no nucleus?
White blood cells are the body's defenders. These mostly round colorless cells fight to
keep the body healthy. Some white blood cells gobble up invader cells and harmful
substances. Other white blood cells produce weapons, called antibodies, to fight
invaders.
Platelets are the blood's repairmen. Groups of them stick together to form a plug
whenever a blood vessel breaks.
Specialized Plant Cells
Multicellular plants also have cells with different jobs to do. These cells group together
into tissues. One type of tissue delivers water, minerals, and nutrients to different parts
of the plant. Some of its cells carry materials from the roots to the leaves. Others carry
food made in the leaves to other plant parts.
Plant Tissue Types
At the tip of every root is a
group of protective cells called the root cap.
Root Cells
Plant roots hold the plant firm in the ground. Each root's thread-like hairs absorb water
and minerals from the soil. Cells in the root hairs have the right structure for taking in
these substances.
Single Cells on the Move
Some single-celled organisms have special features that help them move. The
paramecium, for instance, has a covering of fine hairs. These hairs, or cilia, help the tiny
animal swim.
Paramecia make their homes in freshwater environments such
as ponds and slow streams.