Kurganov B I, Liubarev A E
Biokhimiia. 1991 Jan;56(1):19-32.
Biological organization has been defined as a unity of structure, function and regulation. Biological organization of hierarchical multilevel biological systems is represented by a hierarchy of functioning controllable structures. The hierarchy of levels of material organization predetermines the existence of a hierarchy of regulatory mechanisms. Biochemical organization involves the levels of material organization corresponding to biomacromolecules, supramolecular complexes and cellular organelles. The levels of biomacromolecules and supramolecular structures effectuating elementary functions and controlled by basic regulatory mechanisms occupy key positions in biological systems. These levels play the role of standard functional blocks; their combination leads to hierarchically higher structural levels (cell, tissue, organ, systems of organs, organism) performing more complex functions and controlled by hierarchically more important regulatory mechanisms. The peculiarities of regulation of biological systems that are due to the existence of a hierarchy of regulatory mechanisms are discussed.