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<title>AgnosticWeb.com - How do cells communicate?</title>
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<description>An Agnostic&#039;s Brief Guide to the Universe</description>
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<title>How do cells communicate?</title>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>&amp;quot;Cells communicate through their own language of chemical signals. Different compounds, such as hormones and neurotransmitters, act like words and phrases, telling a cell about the environment around it or communicating messages. When the pancreas detects a person has just eaten, for example, it releases the hormone insulin to tell other cells in the body to remove glucose from the blood. Just as a person needs ears as much as a mouth to have a conversation, cells use receptor proteins either on the outer cell wall or inside the cell itself to &amp;#147;hear&amp;#148; different signals. Once the signal chemical binds to a receptor, that protein turns on a signaling cascade in the cell that ultimately leads to the cell&amp;apos;s response. Every cell has receptors that can detect a lot of different signals, so they are constantly bombarded with biological conversation. Imagine being in a room and having everyone talking at you at once! So how does a plant use cellular communication to grow toward sunlight? The growing tips of plants produce auxin &amp;#151; a hormone that tells cells to grow and divide &amp;#151; which is then sent to the rest of the plant. The shady parts of a plant receive more auxin, which causes those cells to elongate while the sunny-side cells don&amp;apos;t. When one side lengthens while the other side stays the same, the plant will bend.&amp;quot;-http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/science-sushi/2013/08/24/ask-discover-how-do-cells-communicate/-Look at the diagrams: B cell antigen receptor and Akt.-Do you need a decision-maker with these kinds of set up decision circuits?</p>
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<link>https://agnosticweb.com/index.php?id=18555</link>
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<pubDate>Wed, 22 Apr 2015 01:08:25 +0000</pubDate>
<category>Introduction</category><dc:creator>David Turell</dc:creator>
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