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  2. Somatic cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somatic_cell

    In cellular biology, a somatic cell (from Ancient Greek σῶμα (sôma) ' body '), or vegetal cell, is any biological cell forming the body of a multicellular organism other than a gamete, germ cell, gametocyte or undifferentiated stem cell. [1] Somatic cells compose the body of an organism and divide through mitosis.

  3. Somatic (biology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somatic_(biology)

    In cellular biology, the term somatic is derived from the French somatique which comes from Ancient Greek σωματικός (sōmatikós, “bodily”), and σῶμα (sôma, “body”.) [1] [2] is often used to refer to the cells of the body, in contrast to the reproductive cells, which usually give rise to the egg or sperm (or other gametes in other organisms).

  4. Adult stem cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adult_stem_cell

    Adult stem cells are undifferentiated cells, found throughout the body after development, that multiply by cell division to replenish dying cells and regenerate damaged tissues. Also known as somatic stem cells (from Greek σωματικóς, meaning of the body), they can be found in juvenile, adult animals, and humans, unlike embryonic stem ...

  5. Somatic hypermutation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somatic_hypermutation

    Somatic hypermutation (or SHM) is a cellular mechanism by which the immune system adapts to the new foreign elements that confront it (e.g. microbes).A major component of the process of affinity maturation, SHM diversifies B cell receptors used to recognize foreign elements and allows the immune system to adapt its response to new threats during the lifetime of an organism. [1]

  6. Germ-Soma Differentiation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germ-Soma_Differentiation

    In addition, stem cell are undifferentiated cells which can develop into a specialized cell and are the earliest type of cell in a cell lineage. [2] Due to the differentiation in function, somatic cells are found only in multicellular organisms, as in unicellular ones the purposes of somatic and germ cells are consolidated in one cell.

  7. Weismann barrier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weismann_barrier

    Whatever may happen to those cells does not affect the next generation. The Weismann barrier, proposed by August Weismann, is the strict distinction between the "immortal" germ cell lineages producing gametes and "disposable" somatic cells in animals (but not plants), in contrast to Charles Darwin's proposed pangenesis mechanism for inheritance.

  8. Human somatic variation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_somatic_variation

    L1 retrotransposition can happen also in somatic cells causing mosaicism (SLAVs – L1-associated variations) and in cancer. Retrotransposition is a copy and paste process in which the RNA template is retrotranscribed in DNA and integrated randomly in the genome. In humans there are around 500.000 copies of L1 and occupy 17% of genome.

  9. File:Cloning diagram english.svg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Cloning_diagram...

    Description: en: Reproductive and therapeutic cloning english diagram / de: Reproduktives und therapeutisches Klonen mit englicsh Text / Somatic body cell with desired genes, Nucleus fused with enucleated egg cell, Clone, Egg cell, Nucleus removed, REPRODUCTIVE CLONING, THERAPEUTIC CLONING, Surrogate mother, Tissue culture