Fundamentals of Neuroscience/Basic Cell Biology

< Fundamentals of Neuroscience
Resource type: this resource is a lesson.
Subject classification: this is a biology resource .

Goals

Introduction

The brain and the nervous system are primarily comprised of a few highly specialized types of cells. These cells are called neurons and glia. Neurons transmit electrical and chemical signals to one another and this is one way that different parts of the body can communicate. Glia form the majority of the cells in the nervous system, and they basically support the neurons so they can carry out their functions. If you'd like to learn more about the cells in the nervous system right now, you can read the Wikipedia pages about them or the next lesson, but I'm covering some basic information about cells. The next few lessons will describe, among other things, the specific properties of neurons. In order to understand these properties, you probably need to know the basics of how the different parts of a cell contribute to the cell's functioning.

Cells

Cells appear at an intermediate level in the structural hierarchy of living organisms. At a lower level in this hierarchy are molecules, including specific types of organic molecules (not covered in this course). Although some organisms are made up of only a single cell, all organisms with neurons are multicellular. (Neurons are unique to animals.) At a higher level in the structural hierarchy of living organisms exist multicellular organisms, viewed as single units rather than in terms of their building blocks. In a multicellular organism, the several to many types of cells cooperate to form tissues and organs.

Related Wikiversity Resources

Also on the Web

Cell biology

Biochemistry

This article is issued from Wikiversity - version of the Friday, August 02, 2013. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.