What is the biggest singlecelled organism Murry Gans

The elephant is a creature
of epic proportions,

and yet it owes its enormity to more
than 1,000 trillion microscopic cells,

and on the epically small end of things,

there are likely millions
of unicellular species,

yet there are very few we can see
with the naked eye.

Why is that?

Why don’t we get unicellular elephants,

or blue whales,

or brown bears?

To find out, we have to peer into
a cell’s guts.

This is where most
of the cell’s functions occur,

enclosed by a cellular membrane

that acts as the doorway into
and out of the cell.

Any resources the cell needs to consume,

or waste products it needs to expel,

first have to pass through this membrane.

But there’s a biological quirk
in this set up.

A cell’s surface and volume increase
at different rates.

Cells come in many shapes,

but imagining them as cubes will make
the math easy to calculate.

A cube has six faces.

These represent the cell membrane,
and make up its surface area.

A cube measuring one micrometer
on each side,

that’s one millionth of a meter,

would have a total surface area
of six square micrometers.

And its volume would be
one cubic micrometer.

This would give us six units
of surface area

for every single unit of volume,

a six to one ratio.

But things change dramatically
if we make the cube ten times bigger,

measuring ten micrometers on each side.

This cell would have a surface area
of 600 square micrometers

and a volume of one thousand
cubic micrometers,

a ratio of only .6 to one.

That’s less than one unit of surface area
to service each unit of volume.

As the cube grows, its volume increases
much faster than its surface area.

The interior would overtake the membrane,

leaving too little surface area for things
to quickly move in and out of the cell.

A huge cell would back up with waste
and eventually die and disintegrate.

There’s another plus to having multitudes
of smaller cells, too.

It’s hardly a tragedy if one gets
punctured, infected, or destroyed.

Now, there are some
exceptionally large cells

that have adapted to cheat the system,

like the body’s longest cell,

a neuron that stretches from the base
of the spine to the foot.

To compensate for its length,
it’s really thin,

just a few micrometers in diameter.

Another example can be found
in your small intestine,

where structures called villi
fold up into little fingers.

Each villus is made of cells with highly
folded membranes

that have tiny bumps called microvilli
to increase their surface area.

But what about single-celled organisms?

Caulerpa taxifolia, a green algae
that can reach 30 centimeters long,

is believed to be the largest
single-celled organism in the world

thanks to its unique biological hacks.

Its surface area is enhanced with
a frond-like structure.

It uses photosynthesis to assemble
its own food molecules

and it’s coenocytic.

That means it’s a single cell
with multiple nuclei,

making it like a multicellular organism
but without the divisions between cells.

Yet even the biggest unicellular organisms
have limits,

and none grows nearly as large
as the elephant, whale, or bear.

But within every big creature
are trillions of minuscule cells

perfectly suited in all their tininess

to keeping the Earth’s giants
lumbering along.

大象是一种
规模宏大的生物

,但它的庞大要归功于
超过 1,000 万亿个微小细胞,

而在极小的一端,

可能有数百万
个单细胞物种,

但我们能看到的却很少
肉眼。

这是为什么?

为什么我们不养单细胞大象、

蓝鲸

或棕熊?

要找出答案,我们必须
仔细观察细胞的内脏。


是细胞大部分功能发生的地方,

被细胞膜包围,

细胞膜充当进出细胞的通道

细胞需要消耗的任何资源,

或需要排出的废物,

首先必须通过该膜。

但是这个设置有一个生物学上的
怪癖。

细胞的表面和体积
以不同的速率增加。

细胞有多种形状,

但将它们想象成立方体
将使数学易于计算。

一个立方体有六个面。

这些代表细胞膜,
并构成其表面积。 每边

测量一微米的立方体

即百万分之一米,

将具有
六平方微米的总表面积。

它的体积是
一立方微米。

这将为每个单位体积提供六个单位
的表面积

比例为六比一。

但是,
如果我们将立方体放大十倍,

每边测量十微米,情况就会发生巨大变化。

该电池的表面积
为 600 平方微米

,体积为 1000
立方微米

,比例仅为 0.6 比 1。

为每个单位体积提供服务还不到一个单位表面积。

随着立方体的增长,它的体积
比它的表面积增长得快得多。

内部会超过膜,

留下太少的表面积,
无法快速进出细胞。

一个巨大的细胞会以废物为后盾
,最终死亡和瓦解。

拥有
大量较小的单元还有另一个好处。

如果一个人被
刺破、感染或破坏,这几乎不是一场悲剧。

现在,有一些
特别大的

细胞已经适应了欺骗系统,

比如身体最长的细胞,

一个从脊柱底部延伸到足部的神经元

为了弥补它的长度,
它真的很薄,

直径只有几微米。

另一个例子可以
在您的小肠中找到,

其中称为绒毛的结构
折叠成小指。

每个绒毛由具有高度折叠膜的细胞组成,这些细胞

具有称为微绒毛的微小凸起
以增加其表面积。

但是单细胞生物呢?

Caulerpa taxfolia 是一种
长达 30 厘米的绿藻,由于其独特的生物技术,它

被认为是世界上最大的
单细胞生物

它的表面积增加
了叶状结构。

它使用光合作用来组装
自己的食物分子,

并且它是同胞。

这意味着它是一个
具有多个细胞核的单细胞,

使其像一个多细胞生物体,
但没有细胞之间的分裂。

然而,即使是最大的单细胞生物
也有极限

,没有一个能
像大象、鲸鱼或熊一样大。

但在每个大型生物体内都有数
以万亿计的微小细胞

,它们非常

适合让地球上的巨人
蹒跚前行。