When was the last time you saw 100 trillion organisms all
working together for the common good?
When was the last time you looked in the mirror? We don’t often stop to
appreciate it, but each one of us represents the organization and cooperation
of approximately 100 trillion cells. Each one of them is an organism onto
itself, but all of them come together to keep your kidneys filtering and your
brain humming like the finely tuned electrical engine that it is. Next time you
start to feel insignificant, stop and consider that, in fact, that you are a
mountain of biological matter.
What is even more impressive is that at one time, relatively
recently in the grand scheme of things, you were only a single cell. Well, put
more exactly, you were the combination of a sperm cell from your dad and an egg
cell from your mom; but each of those only had half the genetic bounty that you
now enjoy so in effect they were half-cells.
It may seem like a lot of work, turning a single cell (what
a scientist might call a zygote) into a 100 trillion copies of itself, but the
process that did it is happening right now all over your body. The process of
normal cell division is called mitosis – there is also a separate process
called meiosis that produces the half-cells I mentioned a second ago – and it
happens in a few stages that are better explained in the diagram below, rather
than me throwing a bunch of jargon at you.
As you can see, it’s a bit of a chore. It involves a lot of
coordinated copying and sorting and splitting and a bunch of other tedious work
that would get delegated to an intern or co-op student if it were happening in
an office. However, despite all the complexity, your cells do this constantly
and they do a remarkably good job of it, generally speaking.
Your skin cells get completely replaced once every 35 days
on average. The typical blood cell lasts between 5 and 200 days depending which
researchers you ask. Overall, it has been suggested that there is not a single
molecule in your entire body that was there seven years ago. Yet somehow, you
are still you. That is because of devoted and accurate copying of your cells.
But no body is perfect (see what I did there?). Even Babe
Ruth struck out once in a while and even Ken Jennings eventually lost on
Jeopardy. Likewise, your cells make mistakes every now and then and the results
aren’t pleasant. As we learned last week, radioactive energy can wreak havoc on
a cell’s ability to copy itself accurately. Chemicals (like those found in
cigarettes and processed food), too much time in the sun, or general wear and
tear can have the same effect. The
upshot is that the DNA of a particular cell gets confused and starts
replicating in overdrive. Things eventually get so out of hand that the clump
of cells (now called a tumor) take resources away from other parts of your body, and things begin to shut down. We call that cancer.
Aging is also the result of changes in the way cells divide.
As we saw in the diagram near the beginning of this article, cell
division hinges on chromosomes. Recent research has shown that chromosomes have
pieces of code on their tips that are called telomeres. Each time a cell
divides, the telomeres on your chromosomes get a little bit shorter and, as a
result, your body functions a little bit less smoothly than it did before. Your
muscles get a bit weaker, your skin wrinkles a bit more. The link isn’t a
perfect one and a healthy lifestyle can certainly help you postpone some of the
consequences, but so far it seems like getting old is just a side effect of
cell division.
It really is cool stuff. Your body is an example of nature’s
greatest copy machine. Eventually science might even find a way to help your
cells out and prolong your life by a couple hundred years. But until then, take
it easy on the cigars and Twinkies.
4 comments:
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