Biology, asked by priya44215, 4 months ago

What is tissue in biology??​

Answers

Answered by farjanarukhsaar08
2

Answer:

A tissue is a group of cells with a similar structure, organised to carry out specific functions. Examples of tissues: muscle, epithelial tissue (which forms your skin and the lining of your intestine). An organ like the intestine, lung or liver can contain many different types of tissues.

Answered by Anonymous
1

Explanation:

What is tissue in biology?

How does your heart beat? Why does the liver heal better than the brain? How did the bones in your leg grow to support your weight? Scientists working on tissue biology strive to answer questions like these. To do so, they combine many different perspectives. They look at how cells interact with each other and respond to their surroundings. They analyse the shape of cells. They probe chain reactions between molecules. They investigate the genes involved. And they trace the connections between these scales, unveiling how tissues develop, work, regenerate and heal.

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