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Linchpin Linchpin
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10 years ago
The left arm will from birth grow to be a nearly exact mirror copy of the right arm and in synchronous growth rate  too! Yet the only contact between them are various growth hormones discharged into the blood stream and the mechanism involved is the multiplication ( and death ) of 'Dumb Cells'?
Related ancillary question: how do these dumb cells get to decide that they are in say the right arm and not the right leg and they should be muscle not bone cells?
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Staff Member
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10 years ago
A question like this falls under a discussion on cellular differentiation.

In developmental biology, cellular differentiation is the process by which a less specialized cell becomes a more specialized cell type. Differentiation occurs numerous times during the development of a multicellular organism as the organism changes from a simple zygote to a complex system of tissues and cell types. Differentiation is a common process in adults as well: adult stem cells divide and create fully differentiated daughter cells during tissue repair and during normal cell turnover. Differentiation dramatically changes a cell's size, shape, membrane potential, metabolic activity, and responsiveness to signals. These changes are largely due to highly controlled modifications in gene expression. With a few exceptions, cellular differentiation almost never involves a change in the DNA sequence itself. Thus, different cells can have very different physical characteristics despite having the same genome.

A cell that can differentiate into all cell types of the adult organism is known as pluripotent. Such cells are called embryonic stem cells in animals. A cell that can differentiate into all cell types, including the placental tissue, is known as totipotent. In mammals, only the zygote and subsequent blastomeres are totipotent, while in plants many differentiated cells can become totipotent with simple laboratory techniques.
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