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Study in the app →Anatomy & Physiology · Foundations of the Body · Chapter 2
The levels of structural organization
Recall
- The six levels of organization, simplest → most complex?
- chemical → cellular → tissue → organ → organ system → organism
- Each level is built from …?
- the level below it
- An element is …?
- a unique pure substance
- The common elements of the body?
- hydrogen, oxygen, carbon, nitrogen, calcium, iron
- The smallest unit of an element = …?
- an atom
- The three subatomic particles?
- protons, neutrons, electrons
- Two or more atoms bonded = …?
- a molecule
- The smallest independently functioning unit of life = …?
- a cell
- The cell's three basic features?
- membrane, cytoplasm, organelles
- A group of similar cells with a shared function = …?
- a tissue
- A structure of two or more tissue types = …?
- an organ
- A group of organs working together = …?
- an organ system
- The highest level of organization = …?
- the organism
Understand
- Why is a cell called the smallest 'independently functioning' unit?
- It's the smallest unit that can carry out the functions of life on its own — a single bacterium is one cell doing exactly that.
- How is an organelle like an organ?
- Each organelle is a tiny unit inside the cell doing one specific job, just as each organ does a specific job for the whole body.
- Why is an organ 'not just one tissue'?
- An organ is made of two or more tissue types working together as one structure — a single tissue on its own isn't an organ.
- What does 'each level is built from the one below' mean for tissues and organs?
- A tissue is built from cells; an organ is built from tissues — every level is assembled from the level beneath it.
- Why is putting an organ in a single system a simplification?
- Most organs contribute to more than one system, so the boundaries between systems aren't rigid.
- Put in containment order: cell, organ, tissue, organism, organ system.
- organism ⊃ organ system ⊃ organ ⊃ tissue ⊃ cell (each level is made of the one below).
Apply
- The stomach contains muscle, epithelial and nervous tissue working together. Which level of organization is the stomach?
- Organ — an anatomically distinct structure of two or more tissue types (here muscle, epithelium and nervous tissue).
- A pathologist sees a sheet of similar cells all doing one job. Which level is that?
- Tissue — many similar cells working together for a specific function.
- The heart, blood vessels and blood work together to move blood. Which level is that group?
- Organ system (the cardiovascular system) — organs working together for a major function.
- Rank simplest → most complex: organ, atom, cell, molecule, tissue.
- atom → molecule → cell → tissue → organ (each built from the one before).
- A single bacterium carries out all its own life functions. Which level of organization is it?
- Cellular — a cell is the smallest independently functioning unit of life, and the bacterium is one cell.
Lesson
The ladder of organization
Lesson
The chemical level: elements
Lesson
Atoms and subatomic particles
Lesson
Molecules
Lesson
The cell: the smallest unit of life
Lesson
Inside the cell
Lesson
Tissue
Lesson
Organ
Lesson
Organ system
Lesson
Organism — and keeping the ladder straight
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