Emergent Properties
- Multicellular organisms are able to undertake functions that unicellular organisms cannot, e.g. move over vast distances and digest large macromolecules
- This is a result of properties emerging when individual cells organise and interact to produce living organisms
- Scientists sometimes summarise this with the phrase "The whole is greater than the sum of its parts"
- Traditionally, scientists have approached the study of biology from a reductionist perspective, looking at the individual cells, however, due to emergent properties there is an argument that the systems approach should be used
The organisation of multicellular organisms
- In multicellular organisms, specialised cells of the same type group together to form tissues
- A tissue is a group of cells that work together to perform a particular function. For example:
- Epithelial cells group together to form epithelial tissue (the function of which, in the small intestine, is to absorb food)
- Muscle cells (another type of specialised cell) group together to form muscle tissue (the function of which is to contract in order to move parts of the body)
- The heart is made up of many different tissues (including cardiac muscle tissue, blood vessel tissues and connective tissue, as well as many others)
The organisation of multicellular organisms
Levels of Organisation in Humans Table