28/07/2015
Bulletin #5
Cells are the basic units of life. The microscopic building blocks from which the human body as well as those of animals, insects, and plants are constructed.
Every adult body contains more than a hundred million cells, microscopic structures averaging only a hundredth of a millimeter in diameter. No one cell is capable of surviving on its own outside the body unless it is cultured (artificially bred) in a special conditions, but when grouped together into tissues, organs and systems of the body, they work together in harmony to sustain life.
Despite these variations, all body cells are constructed according to the same basic pattern. Around the outside of every cell is a boundary wall or cell membrane enclosing a jelly-like substance, the cytoplasm. Embedded in these is the nucleus, which houses generic instructions in the form of chromosomes. These chromosomes are essential to the creation and maintenance of human life and personal characteristics.
The cytoplasm, although between 70-85% water, is far from inactive. Many chemical reactions take place between substances dissolved in these water, and the cytoplasm also contains many tiny structures called organelles, each with an important and a specific task.
The cell membrane also has a definite structure. It is porous and is rathe like a sandwich of protein and fat, with the fat as a filling, as substances pass into or out of the cell, they are either dissolved in the fat or passed through the porous, semi permeable membrane.
Some cells have hair like projections called cilia on their membranes. In the nose, for example, the cilia is used to trap dust particles. These hairs can also move in unison to what substances along in a particular destination.
The cytoplasm of all cells contains microscopic sausage-shaped organs called mitochondria,
which convert oxygen and nutrients into the energy needed for all the other actions of the cells. These powerhouses work through the action of enzymes, complex proteins which speed up chemical reactions in the cell, and are most numerous in the muscle cells which need an enormous amount of energy to carry out their work.
Lysosomes, another type of microscopic organ in the cytoplasm, are tiny sacks filled with enzymes that make it possible for the cells to used the nutrient with which it is supplied. The liver cells contains the greatest number.
Neoigel supplies supplies an interferon enzyme through a system of channels called the endoplasmic reticulum. These enzymes join and alters the fat and nutrients through the ribosomes, responsible for controlling the construction of essential proteins needed by all cells to survive. All normal cells don't get affected by the new and altered ribosomes and continue to get the nutrients to survive. However, hay wired and disorganized cells like carcinoma cells simply get obnoxious reaction with to these carrageenan enzymes and rejects it outright. In the process, they starve and die.