Can we identify the location and function of a cell by looking at its structure?
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Answer:
The microscopic containers known as cells are the basic units of living things on Earth. Each one boasts all of the characteristics that scientists ascribe to life. In fact, some living things consist of only a single cell. Your own body, on the other hand, has in the range of 100 trillion.
Almost all single-celled organisms are prokaryotes, and in the grand classification-of-life scheme, these belong to either the Bacteria domain or the Archaea domain. Humans, along with all other animals, plants and fungi, are eukaryotes.
These tiny structures perform the same tasks on a "micro" scale to keep themselves intact that you and other full-sized organisms do on a "macro" scale to remain alive. And obviously, if enough individual cells fail at these tasks, the parent organism will fail along with