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Structural Organization of the Human Body: An Overview01:18

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Biological organization is the classification of biological structures, ranging from atoms at the bottom of the hierarchy to the Earth's biosphere. Each level of the hierarchy represents an increase in complexity that builds upon the previous level.
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Bacterial and archaeal cells exhibit remarkable diversity in shape and structure, critical in their adaptability and functionality. Among bacteria, the most commonly observed shapes include cocci and bacilli. Cocci are spherical and may exist singly or in groupings such as pairs (diplococci), chains (streptococci), clusters (staphylococci), or tetrads. Bacilli, in contrast, are rod-shaped and can also occur as single cells, in pairs, or chains, depending on their environmental and genetic...
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Biology is a natural science that studies life and living organisms, including their structure, function, development, interactions, evolution, distribution, and taxonomy. The field's scope is extensive and divided into several specialized disciplines, such as anatomy, physiology, ethology, genetics, and many more. All living things share a few key traits, including cellular organization, heritable genetic material and the ability to adapt/evolve, metabolism to regulate energy needs, the...
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Groups of proteins may form a complex where each protein in this complex has a different role in the overall execution of the complex’s function. Often some of the proteins in the complex can be replaced by a closely related variant to give a complex that contains many of the same components yet is functionally distinct.
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jul 15, 2025

Design, Surface Treatment, Cellular Plating, and Culturing of Modular Neuronal Networks Composed of Functionally Inter-connected Circuits
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Design, Surface Treatment, Cellular Plating, and Culturing of Modular Neuronal Networks Composed of Functionally Inter-connected Circuits

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Modularity of biological systems: a link between structure and function.

Claus Kadelka1, Matthew Wheeler2, Alan Veliz-Cuba3

  • 1Department of Mathematics, Iowa State University, Ames, IA 50011, United States.

Biorxiv : the Preprint Server for Biology
|September 25, 2023
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Biological systems exhibit modularity, with gene regulatory networks showing a strong link between structure and function. This modularity may have evolved to enhance complexity and robustness in biological systems.

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Area of Science:

  • Systems Biology
  • Computational Biology
  • Genetics

Background:

  • Biological systems are often hypothesized to be modular.
  • Understanding the relationship between biological structure and function is a key challenge.
  • Gene regulatory networks (GRNs) are crucial for cellular function and are commonly modeled using Boolean networks.

Conclusions:

  • Structural modularity in gene regulatory networks directly influences functional modularity.
  • Modularity may be an evolved trait that enhances both phenotypic complexity and dynamic robustness.
  • This study reinforces the importance of considering both structure and dynamics in systems biology.