Stephen R. Bolsover

Cell Biology


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the building blocks of microtubules and microfilaments (Table 1.1). When a cell similar to a present‐day Asgard archaeon engulfed an oxygen‐using bacterium it could then begin the slow process of evolving into the multitude of eukaryotes that exist today.

CELL SPECIALIZATION IN ANIMALS

Schematic illustration of transmission electron micrograph of a capillary blood vessel running between cardiac muscle cells.

      Source: Image by Giorgio Gabella, Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, University College London. Reproduced by permission.

Schematic illustration of different types of animal cells. Schematic illustration of tissues and structures of the intestine wall. Photo depicts scanning electron micrograph of airway epithelium.

      Source: Image by Giorgio Gabella, Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, University College London. Reproduced by permission.

      Nervous tissue is a highly modified epithelium that is composed of several cell types. Principal among these are the nerve cells, also called neurons (Figure 1.5c), along with a variety of supporting cells that help maintain them. Neurons extend processes called axons, which can be over a meter in length. Neurons constantly monitor what is occurring inside and outside the body. They integrate and summarize this information and mount appropriate responses to it (Chapters 911). Another type of cell, glia, has other roles in nervous tissue, including forming the electrical insulation around axons.

      Muscle tissue can be of two types, smooth or striated. Smooth muscle cells are long and slender and are usually found in the walls of tubular organs such as the intestine and many blood vessels. In general, smooth muscle cells contract slowly and can maintain the contracted state for a long time. There are two classes of striated muscle: cardiac and skeletal. Cardiac muscle cells (Figure 1.4) make up the walls of the heart chambers. These are branched cells that are connected electrically by gap junctions (page 26), and their automatic rhythmical contraction powers the beating of the heart. Each skeletal muscle is a bundle of hundreds to thousands of fibers,