Abstract

We suggest that the basal lamina is essentially a second plasma or cell membrane appearing at the next higher level of biological organization; that together with associated cell monolayers it creates a tissue level membrane which is used to form multicellular cells and that collections of these provide the essential structure of metazoa. Thus when the histological structure of multicellular organisms is viewed in a topologically simplified form such organisms appear to be sets of multicellular cells ( m-cells) formed by a unit tissue membrane built around the basal lamina. Not only are m-cells in this way structurally isomorphous (homeomorphic) to unit or classical biological cells ( u-cells) but the two cellular levels are also functionally isomorphous. This suggests a “General Principle of Hierarchical Isomorphism or Iteration”, i.e. that multicellular evolution recapitulates unicellular evolution. This principle of structural and functional isomorphic mappability of unicellular onto multicellular organisms then governs the organization of matter all the way from molecules to man. Just as cytoplasm precipitates the bimolecular plasma membrane to form u-cells for the purpose of achieving reaction sequestration, in turn, these u-cells precipitate a common basal lamina to form m-cells, the histologist's acini, to produce sequestered “tissue plasms”. Thus, the “generalized acinus” with its basal laminar complex seem to constitute a second level (multicellular) cell and cell membrane, respectively. Four operators, ultimately under genetic control, can generate both u and m-cells from planar configurations of their respective unit membranes therewith providing the essential structure of all cells, tissues, organs and organisms. These are the ply, permeability vector, topological and stratificational operators. They are collected into a set of “organ formulae”. Both the plasma membrane and the basal lamina act as covering membranes and, again, as membranes for subcells so that a complete multicellular organism is a tetrahierarchical cell in which the molecule is the element of the first two cellular domains and the cell is the element of the last two. The analysis identifies a new transport organ group which together with the classical endocrine and exocrine groups comprises nearly the whole of the soft tissue organs. In a major reduction, all these organs are continuously (topologically) transformable into each and into hollow spheres, cells or acini thus greatly simplifying the histology of metazoa. Given this emphasis on cellularization it would seem that life, i.e. the autonomous chemoservo, results from the cooperation of cellularization and replication operations on the catalyzation process. Through cellularization, the lipid bilayer and basal laminar membranes provide the essential catalytic reaction sequestration demanded by chemical reaction theory while through complementary base pairing the DNA double helix provides the essential memory which stores the patterns of the variations of the sequestered reactions.

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