In this Very Short Introduction, Terrence Allen and Graham Cowling offer an illuminating account of the nature of cells--their basic structure, forms, division, signaling, and programmed death. Allen and Cowling start with the simple "prokaryotic" cell--cells with no nucleus--and show how the bodies of more complex plants and animals consist of billions of "eukaryotic" cells, of varying kinds, adapted to fill different roles--red blood cells, muscle cells, branched neurons. The authors also show that each cell is an astonishingly complex chemical factory, the activities of which we have only begun to unravel in the past fifty years.
CONCIOUSNESS A VERY SHORT INTRODUCTION
SUSAN BLACKMORE
OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
MARINE BIOLOGY A VERY SHORT INTRODUCTION
PHILIP V. MLADENOV
THE HISTORY OF MEDICINE A VERY SHORT INTRODUCTION
WILLIAM BYNUM
The History of Life A Very Short Introduction
MICHAEL J. BENTON
EPIDEMIOLOGY A VERY SHORT INTRODUCTION
RODOLFO SARACCI
Astrobiology A Very Short Introduction
DAVID C. CATLING
FOOD A VERY SHORT INTRODUCTION
JOHN KERBS
Genes A Very Short Introduction
JONATHAN SLACK
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