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References
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What is a cell type and how to define it? - PMC - PubMed Central - NIHCell types are the basic functional units of an organism. They exhibit diverse phenotypic properties at multiple levels, making them challenging to define, ...
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[2]
What is a cell?: MedlinePlus GeneticsFeb 22, 2021 · Cells are the basic building blocks of all living things. The human body is made of trillions of cells that carry out specialized functions.
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[3]
Histology, Cell - StatPearls - NCBI Bookshelf - NIHMar 27, 2025 · Cells are of different types, each with a unique function. Estimates suggest that the adult human body contains over 200 different cell types.
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[4]
What defines a cell type? Perspectives from adipocyte biology - NatureDec 3, 2024 · A “cell type” is traditionally defined by its distinct anatomy and physiology, yet certain cell types possess the ability to undergo ...
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[5]
What is a cell type and how to define it? - ScienceDirectJul 21, 2022 · Cell types are the basic functional units of an organism. Cell types exhibit diverse phenotypic properties at multiple levels, making them challenging to ...
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The Definition of Cell Type | Circulation ResearchCurrently “cell type” is defined, in most cases, either by morphology or by a small number of genes that have been identified with that tissue. Thus, we define ...
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The beginnings of cell theory: Schleiden, Schwann, and VirchowJul 15, 2022 · Schwann, a physician by training, and Schleiden, a botanist from Hamburg, were the founders of the original concept of cell theory.
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Looking at the Structure of Cells in the Microscope - NCBI - NIHSimilarly, the introduction of the far more powerful electron microscope in the early 1940s required the development of new techniques for preserving and ...
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The Prokaryote-Eukaryote Dichotomy: Meanings and Mythology - PMCProkaryotic and eukaryotic in his usage meant “the condition of possessing prokarya or eukarya.” They were not meant to be taxonomic terms but only a way of ...
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[10]
Integration of Signaling Pathways with the Epigenetic Machinery in ...Stem cells balance their self-renewal and differentiation potential by integrating environmental signals with the transcriptional regulatory network.
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Basics of Stem Cell Biology as Applied to the Brain - NCBI - NIHJul 27, 2016 · To be classified as “multipotent,” stem cells must make at least two different lineages, usually from the same embryonic germ layer. In contrast ...
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[12]
The Key Role of DNA Methylation and Histone Acetylation in ... - NIHFirst, epigenetic modifications alter the binding capacity between DNA and histones by changing their electrostatic charges. Second, they serve as docking sites ...
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Eukaryotes and their Origins | Organismal BiologyUnique Traits and Adaptations of Eukaryotes · Cells with nuclei surrounded by a nuclear envelope with nuclear pores: This is the single trait that is both ...
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Chapter 4: Organism form: composition, size, and shapeUnicellular eukaryotes possess cells with nuclei and other cellular organelles. They are generally bigger (10-100 um) than prokaryotes although there are a ...
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Protozoa: Structure, Classification, Growth, and Development - NCBIProtozoa are microscopic unicellular eukaryotes that have a relatively complex internal structure and carry out complex metabolic activities.
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[16]
Yeast – Inanimate Life - Milne PublishingYeasts in general are unicellular fungi and in form and size very similar to bacteria. Like all fungi, they have a cell wall composed of chitin and possess a ...Missing: characteristics | Show results with:characteristics
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[17]
Algae Classification - Smithsonian National Museum of Natural HistoryMost diatoms are planktonic, but some are bottom dwellers or grow on other algae or plants. Except for their male gametes, diatoms lack flagella.<|separator|>
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[18]
Genetic Information in Eucaryotes - Molecular Biology of the CellEucaryotic cells, in general, are bigger and more elaborate than procaryotic cells, and their genomes are bigger and more elaborate, too.The Genome Defines The... · Many Eucaryotes Live As... · The Mouse Serves As A Model...
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[19]
Life cycle strategies in free‐living unicellular eukaryotesJul 31, 2024 · Historically, protist reproduction was thought to be limited to binary fission (i.e. asexual reproduction) like bacterial reproduction (Lahr et ...
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[20]
Choanoflagellates - Tree of Life Web ProjectAug 14, 2006 · As one of the closest living relatives of animals, choanoflagellates serve as a useful model for reconstructions of the last unicellular ...
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What choanoflagellates can teach us about symbiosis - PMCApr 3, 2024 · This Perspective explores why choanoflagellates are an exciting system for enriching our understanding of eukaryote-bacteria symbioses.
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Embryology, Gastrulation - StatPearls - NCBI Bookshelf - NIHApr 23, 2023 · The process of gastrulation generates the three primary germ layers ectoderm, endoderm, and mesoderm. Gastrulation primes the system for ...
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[23]
Animal Development II: Gastrulation & OrganogenesisThe three germ layers of triploblasts, shown below, are the endoderm, the ectoderm, and the mesoderm. During gastrulation, the cells of the embryo move ...
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[24]
The evolution of multicellular complexity: the role of relatedness and ...Jul 22, 2020 · For example, our bodies contain 1014 cells with more than 200 specialized types [2] but Volvox is 10 orders of magnitude smaller and has just ...<|control11|><|separator|>
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[25]
Some of the Cells that Arise from Animal Gastrulas with Three Germ ...Aug 21, 2014 · From a developing embryos three primary germ layers, ectoderm (green), mesoderm (pink) and endoderm (yellow), a variety of differentiated cell types and organ ...
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Histology, Epithelial Cell - StatPearls - NCBI Bookshelf - NIHStratified squamous epithelium does not allow for as much diffusion of nutrients as simple squamous because the nutrients would have to traverse through ...Introduction · Structure · Function · Histochemistry and...
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Fibroblasts: origins, definitions, and functions in health and diseaseA major shared function of fibroblasts is ECM synthesis to create connective tissue by depositing fiber- and sheet-forming collagens, proteoglycans, elastin, ...
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[28]
The intercalated disc: a mechanosensing signalling node in ... - NIHCardiomyocytes, the cells generating contractile force in the heart, are connected to each other through a highly specialised structure, the intercalated disc ( ...
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[29]
Neuroanatomy, Neurons - StatPearls - NCBI BookshelfWhen an action potential reaches the axon terminal of the motor neuron, voltage-dependent calcium channels open and accommodate the influx of calcium.
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[30]
New insights into the mechanisms of red blood cell enucleationUnlike other somatic cells, RBCs are anucleate, a feature that increases their capacity for hemoglobin storage and oxygen transport [4].
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[31]
Lymphocytes and the Cellular Basis of Adaptive Immunity - NCBI - NIHLymphocytes are responsible for the astonishing specificity of adaptive immune responses. They occur in large numbers in the blood and lymph.Lymphocytes Are Required for... · The Adaptive Immune System...
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[32]
The architecture and operating mechanism of a cnidarian stinging ...Jun 17, 2022 · The stinging organelles of jellyfish, sea anemones, and other cnidarians, known as nematocysts, are remarkable cellular weapons used for ...
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Histology, Osteocytes - StatPearls - NCBI Bookshelf - NIHMatured osteocytes are the most common cells in bone tissues, and the majority of receptor activities involved with bone function are available in these cells.Missing: vertebrates | Show results with:vertebrates
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2.11: Plant Cell Structures - Biology LibreTextsMar 5, 2021 · Plant cells have a cell wall, a large central vacuole, and plastids such as chloroplasts. · The cell wall is a rigid layer that is found outside ...Missing: totipotency | Show results with:totipotency
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Plant cells - PlantFacts - The Ohio State UniversityThree distinctive features of plant cells are the presence of. a cell wall composed of cellulose and other polysaccharides. plastids; vacuoles. The composition ...Missing: totipotency | Show results with:totipotency
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[36]
Unique Features of Animal and Plant Cells | Biology for Majors IPlant cells have a cell wall, chloroplasts and other specialized plastids, and a large central vacuole, whereas animal cells do not.Missing: cellulose totipotency
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[37]
Plant cell | McGraw Hill's AccessSciencePlant cells are distinguished by a rigid cell wall, vacuoles, and chloroplasts, which contain chlorophyll for photosynthesis.Missing: totipotency | Show results with:totipotency<|separator|>
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Callus, Dedifferentiation, Totipotency, Somatic EmbryogenesisHowever, plant regeneration from a totipotent cell must fulfill two main criteria: (i) it must be initiated in an individual cell since totipotency is a ...Introduction – a Short... · Dedifferentiation and Callus... · Totipotency and Somatic...
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Molecular Mechanisms of Plant Regeneration from Differentiated CellsBoth somatic embryogenesis and whole plant regeneration from protoplasts provide clear evidence to demonstrate the plant cells' ability to exert totipotency ...
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3.1.3: Plant Tissues - Biology LibreTextsJul 28, 2025 · The basic functions of parenchyma are photosynthesis and storage. They are also important in regeneration because they are totipotent (capable ...<|separator|>
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[41]
Parenchyma - PropG - University of FloridaThese stored materials are used to support new spring shoot and leaf growth. Parenchyma cells in the leaf actively involved with photosynthesis are termed ...
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[42]
Plant Cell and Tissue TypesParenchyma cells retain the ability to divide throughout their lives, so they are important in vegetative regeneration and wound healing. For example, roots ...
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[43]
Collenchyma: a versatile mechanical tissue with dynamic cell wallsAug 29, 2012 · Although collenchyma tissues are especially suited to provide support to young plant organs, they may also serve as the main supporting ...
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[44]
6.1 Plant Cells and Tissues – The Science of PlantsExamples of plant fibers made up of sclerenchyma cells include jute, hemp, and flax (the fabric made of flax fibers is called linen). Cotton is not in this ...
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[45]
Lecture 6 - Daniel L. NickrentOct 10, 2022 · In addition to collenchyma, sclerenchyma is one of the principal supporting tissues in a plant. It is composed of cells that are dead at ...
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[46]
Xylem - PropG - University of FloridaXylem is a tissue system consisting of specialized cells with lignified secondary cell walls responsible for water movement through the plant.
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[47]
Plant Development I: Tissue differentiation and functionGround tissue cells include parenchyma, which carry out photosynthesis in the leaves and store sugar in the roots; collenchyma, which supports the stems and ...
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[48]
Phloem - CIE A Level Biology Revision Notes - Save My ExamsSep 26, 2025 · Sieve tube elements · They transport sugars and nutrients up and down the plants in sieve cells ; Companion cells · They also play a role in ...
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[49]
30.16: Transport of Water and Solutes in Plants - Biology LibreTextsNov 22, 2024 · Phloem sap travels through perforations called sieve tube plates. Neighboring companion cells carry out metabolic functions for the sieve-tube ...
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[50]
How Guard Cells Function — Biological Strategy - AskNatureMay 2, 2020 · Guard cells use osmotic pressure to open and close stomata, allowing plants to regulate the amount of water and solutes within them.
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4.5.1.2.2: Stomatal Opening and Closure - Biology LibreTextsJul 28, 2025 · When the osmotic pressure of the guard cells became greater than that of the surrounding cells, the stomata opened. In the evening, when the ...
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What Are Plant Trichomes? | Plant Specialists NYCAug 27, 2023 · Trichomes are plant hairs, varying in size, shape, and color, located on the outer skin. They can be glandular or non-glandular, and have ...
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[53]
Plant Reproduction | Organismal BiologyThe pollen tube cell grows to form the pollen tube, guided to the micropyle by chemical signals from the synergid cells.
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[54]
5.2: Plant reproduction- pollination and fertilizationJan 30, 2024 · Pollination is defined as the transfer of pollen from the male part of a flower to the female part of the flower, usually the flower on another plant.
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[55]
Fungi | Organismal Biologyall fungi possess cell walls made of a tough polysaccharide called chitin; the cell wall provides structural strength to the fungal body (chitin is also a ...
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[56]
Introduction to Mycology - Medical Microbiology - NCBI BookshelfFungi possess chitinous cell walls, plasma membranes containing ergosterol, 80S rRNA, and microtubules composed of tubulin. Morphology. Yeasts are single-celled ...Missing: chlorophyll | Show results with:chlorophyll
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[57]
13.4 Fungi – Concepts of Zoology – Hawaiʻi Edition - UH PressbooksChitin, also found in the exoskeleton of insects, gives structural strength to the cell walls of fungi. The cell wall protects the cell from desiccation and ...
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[58]
Characteristics of Fungi - OpenEd CUNYA thick cell wall made of chitin surrounds the cell. Fungi can be unicellular as yeasts, or develop a network of filaments called a mycelium, which is often ...
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[59]
Fungal Morphogenesis, from the Polarized Growth of Hyphae to ...The Spitzenkörper is believed to function as a VSC that regulates the delivery of cell wall-building vesicles to the apical cell surface (23). By programming a ...Missing: septate | Show results with:septate
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[60]
Six Key Traits of Fungi: Their Evolutionary Origins and Genetic BasesSuch aseptate hyphae are a multinucleate, coenocytic architecture, similar to hyphae of early-diverging fungal groups (e.g., Mucoromycota). Within fungi, hyphae ...
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[61]
Cellular anatomy of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi - PMCAseptate, or coenocytic, hyphae are a common feature among early-diverging fungi. This morphology contrasts with later-diverging fungal lineages, in which ...
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[62]
Basic Biology of Fungi - Medical Microbiology - NCBI Bookshelf - NIHMost of the molds that produce septate vegetative hyphae reproduce exclusively by asexual means, giving rise to airborne propagules called conidia. On the other ...
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[63]
FungiYeastsare unicellular fungi which reproduce asexually by blastoconidia formation (budding) or fission. Hyphaeare multi-cellular fungi which reproduce asexually ...
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[64]
Molds - FungiThey produce characteristic asexual reproductive spores called macroconidia and microconidia ... As mentioned earlier, the yeast Candida albicans can also exhibit ...<|control11|><|separator|>
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[65]
Nutrient exchange in arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis from a ...An increased sucrose level in cells colonized with AM fungi in turn stimulates the nutrient exchange and results in an increased P and N transfer to the plant ( ...
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[66]
MycorrhizaeThe hyphae enter the root and create swellings (vesicles) for nutrient storage structures where nutrients are transferred between fungus and plant (arbuscules).Missing: exchange | Show results with:exchange
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[67]
Ecology of Fungi - OERTXThe lichen has multiple layers. The top layer, or cortex, is made up This cross-section of a lichen thallus shows the (a) upper cortex of fungal hyphae, which ...
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[68]
Lichen Biology - USDA Forest ServiceThe general structure of a lichen is composed of layers of fungus and alga. Cortex. The cortex is the outer layer of the lichen thallus. These cells are thicker ...Missing: hyphal | Show results with:hyphal
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[69]
The Ins and Outs of Rust Haustoria - PMC - PubMed CentralSep 11, 2014 · Through haustoria, the pathogen derives nutrients from the host and secretes virulence proteins called effectors, which are believed to be the ...
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[70]
The haustorium: The root of biotrophic fungal pathogens - PMCAug 29, 2022 · The haustoria emerge after cell wall penetration and are surrounded by an invaginated plant plasma membrane (Mendgen and Deising, 1993). Fungal ...
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[71]
Hidden robbers: The role of fungal haustoria in parasitism of plantsThe development of the haustorium is the final step of an infection pathway in which the plant host plays a major role. In the case of rust fungi, infection ...
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[72]
Cell type ontologies of the Human Cell Atlas | Nature Cell BiologyNov 8, 2021 · Massive single-cell profiling efforts have accelerated our discovery of the cellular composition of the human body while at the same time ...
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[73]
The human cell count and size distribution - PNASSep 18, 2023 · Such partitioning yields 1,264 separate cell groups, comprising the 400 major cell types across 60 tissues. For each cell group, we compile data ...
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[74]
Somatic Cells - National Human Genome Research InstituteSomatic cells are the cells in the body other than sperm and egg cells (which are called germ cells). In humans, somatic cells are diploid.
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[75]
Germline stem cells in human | Signal Transduction and Targeted ...Oct 2, 2022 · The germline stem cells, as a unique cell type, generate various states of germ stem cells and then differentiate into specialized cells, spermatozoa and ova, ...
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[76]
Stem Cell BasicsWhen a stem cell divides, the resulting two daughter cells may be: 1) both stem cells, 2) a stem cell and a more differentiated cell, or 3) both more ...
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[77]
4.1 Types of Tissues – Anatomy & Physiology 2eAggregations of cells in the human body be classified into four types of tissues: epithelial, connective, muscle, and nervous. Epithelial tissues act as ...
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[78]
Embryology, Weeks 6-8 - StatPearls - NCBI BookshelfOct 10, 2022 · Organs arise from the endoderm, ectoderm, and mesoderm; the three primary germ cell layers are established during gastrulation. Each of these ...
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[79]
Physiology, Action Potential - StatPearls - NCBI Bookshelf - NIHIn neurons, the rapid rise in potential, depolarization, is an all-or-nothing event that is initiated by the opening of sodium ion channels within the plasma ...Cellular Level · Development · Function · Mechanism
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[80]
Neuroglial Cells - Neuroscience - NCBI Bookshelf - NIHGlial roles that are well-established include maintaining the ionic milieu of nerve cells, modulating the rate of nerve signal propagation, modulating synaptic ...
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[81]
Glial Contributions to Neural Function and Disease - PMCNeurons generate and propagate electrical and chemical signals, whereas glia function mainly to modulate neuron function and signaling. Just as there are many ...
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[82]
Physiology, Skeletal Muscle - StatPearls - NCBI BookshelfJul 30, 2023 · Skeletal muscle fibers are striated, multinucleated cells ranging from 10 to 100 micrometers in diameter and many centimeters long. The nuclei ...Cellular Level · Development · Function · Mechanism
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[83]
Physiology, Cardiac Muscle - StatPearls - NCBI BookshelfCardiac muscle cells contain branched fibers connected via intercalated discs that contain gap junctions and desmosomes. ... The role of myocardial gap junctions ...
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[84]
Physiology, Smooth Muscle - StatPearls - NCBI BookshelfAug 14, 2023 · At a cellular level, smooth muscle functions as an involuntary non-striated muscle. Smooth muscle contains thick and thin filaments that do not ...
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[85]
Histology, Chondrocytes - StatPearls - NCBI Bookshelf - NIHThe cartilage is solely composed of cells known as chondrocytes. Chondrocytes maintain the extracellular matrix (ECM) and produce the cartilage matrix.
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[86]
Histology, Osteoblasts - StatPearls - NCBI Bookshelf - NIHOsteoblasts are colloquially referred to as cells that "build" bone. · Bone is approximately 10% water, 30% organic, and 60% inorganic. · Osteoblasts derive from ...Introduction · Issues of Concern · Histochemistry and... · Microscopy, Electron
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[87]
Histology at SIU, connective tissueAdipocytes function primarily as warehouses for reserve energy. ... Adipose tissue is loose connective tissue which is dominated by fat cells, or adipocytes.Missing: chondrocytes | Show results with:chondrocytes
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[88]
Goblet cells: guardians of gut immunity and their role in ... - NIHGoblet cells (GCs) are specialised guardians lining the intestine. They play a critical role in gut defence and immune regulation.Missing: leukocytes | Show results with:leukocytes
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[89]
Pancreatic β-Cell Electrical Activity and Insulin Secretion: Of Mice ...The pancreatic β-cell plays a key role in glucose homeostasis by secreting insulin, the only hormone capable of lowering the blood glucose concentration.
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[90]
Macrophages in inflammation and its resolution - PMC - NIHMacrophages can enter various tissues under inflammatory or non-inflammatory conditions and assume different functions and phenotypes according to the cues ...
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[91]
Revisiting Epithelial Carcinogenesis - PMC - PubMed Central - NIHJul 4, 2022 · This paper presents a hypothesis for the origin of carcinomas in which cellular aging and inflammation enable the recovery of cellular plasticity, which may ...
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[92]
Histology, Staining - StatPearls - NCBI BookshelfMay 1, 2023 · For example, one of the most common stains, Hematoxylin, is a basic dye that stains proteins a blue color, while Eosin stains proteins a pink ...
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[93]
The cells of Robert Hooke: pores, fibres, diaphragms and ... - JournalsJan 4, 2023 · In Micrographia, a book published in 1665, he described observations he had made in a wide variety of living and non-living objects with an ...
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[94]
Life and discoveries of Camillo Golgi - NobelPrize.orgApr 20, 1998 · In 1897, studying the nervous system with his black reaction, Golgi noticed in neurons an intracellular structure, whose existence he officially ...
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[95]
Processing tissue and cells for transmission electron microscopy in ...Oct 4, 2007 · TEM is used to study the morphology of cells and their organelles, and in the identification and characterization of viruses, bacteria, protozoa ...
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[96]
Dynamic assembly of surface structures in living cells - PNASRelatively short (<500-nm) microvilli are observed on the surfaces of most cells, including fibroblasts, growing neurons, and epithelial cells. As any ...
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[97]
An Introduction to Specimen Processing - Leica BiosystemsFormalin, usually as a phosphate-buffered solution, is the most popular fixative for preserving tissues that will be processed to prepare paraffin sections.
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[98]
Flow Cytometry: An Overview - PMC - NIHVisible light scatter is measured in two different directions, the forward direction (Forward Scatter or FSC) which can indicate the relative size of the cell ...
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[99]
Single-Cell RNA-Sequencing: Astrocyte and Microglial ...Jun 24, 2022 · GFAP levels increase in response to injury or disease, leading to its use as a marker to identify specifically reactive astrocytes. However, it ...
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[100]
Identification of region-specific astrocyte subtypes at single cell ...Mar 5, 2020 · Our analysis identifies five transcriptomically distinct astrocyte subtypes in adult mouse cortex and hippocampus.
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[101]
Science Forum: The Human Cell Atlas | eLifeDec 5, 2017 · Starting in the 1930s, electron microscopy provided up to 5000-fold higher resolution, making it possible to discover and distinguish cells ...
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[102]
Human Cell AtlasNov 20, 2024 · The Human Cell Atlas is a global consortium that is mapping every cell type in the human body, creating a 3-dimensional Atlas of human cells.Publications · About the Human Cell Atlas · Contact · HCA Data PortalMissing: initiation | Show results with:initiation
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Appendix II. CD Antigens - Immunobiology - NCBI BookshelfAppendix II. CD antigens ; CD37, Mature B cells, mature T cells, myeloid cells, 40–52 ; CD38, Early B and T cells, activated T cells, germinal center B cells, ...
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[104]
Fluorescence-Activated Cell Sorting (FACS) - Bio-RadFACS is a flow cytometry method that sorts cells based on light scattering and fluorescence, using droplet technology to separate cells by size and/or ...
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[105]
Using Fluorescence Activated Cell Sorting to Examine Cell-Type ...May 28, 2015 · FACS isolates individual neural cells for analysis of cell-type-specific gene expression, protein expression, or epigenetic modifications, ...
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[106]
Chromatin accessibility profiling by ATAC-seq - PubMed CentralATAC-seq provides a simple and scalable way to detect the unique chromatin landscape associated with a cell type and how it may be altered by perturbation or ...
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[107]
A single-cell atlas of chromatin accessibility in the human genomeNov 24, 2021 · Here, we used single-cell ATAC-seq to profile chromatin accessibility in 615,998 cells across 30 adult human tissues representing a wide range ...
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[108]
Simultaneous lineage tracing and cell-type identification using ... - NIHLINNAEUS provides a systematic approach for tracing the origin of novel cell types, or known cell types under different conditions.
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[109]
Single-Cell CRISPR-Based Lineage Tracing in Mice | BiochemistryNov 15, 2019 · The reconstructed lineage trees overlaid with cell type information could map the relationships between several embryonic and extra-embryonic ...
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[110]
Visium Spatial Platform | 10x GenomicsThe Visium platform delivers unbiased, whole transcriptome spatial gene expression analysis at single cell scale with unmatched spatial data quality.
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[111]
Pan-cancer molecular subtypes of metastasis reveal distinct and ...Feb 1, 2023 · We identify four expression-based subtypes of metastasis transcending tumor lineage. The first subtype has extensive copy alterations.
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[112]
Molecular Subtyping of Cancer Based on Distinguishing Co ... - NIHMay 2, 2022 · Molecular subtyping of cancer is recognized as a critical and challenging step towards individualized therapy.