No. the skin cells wouldn't be capable of producing other skin cells. No nuclei are found in the cells of the outermost layer of your skin. A company claims that its moisturizer can restore and rejuvenate these cells.
Currently, the parts of the body that can be replaced with cells include skin, blood, and bone marrow. Skin grafts can be used to replace damaged skin, blood transfusions can replace blood cells, and bone marrow transplants can be performed to replace damaged or diseased bone marrow. However, the ability to completely replace complex organs or tissues like the heart or liver with cells is still a developing field of research.
labile cells are found in the hair on your head and in your blood
Red blood cells and many white blood cells are made in bone marrow. (Some types of White blood cells are made in the spleen, live and lymph glands.)
Yes. Any cells that form connective tissue (found in bone, muscle, skin, cartilage, etc) come from the same progenitor line of cells originating from the embryonic mesoderm (one of 3 embryonic "germ" layers). The process starts with Multipotent Stem Cells (MSC). They all have the same lineage. Eventually, they branch off and differentiate into different types of connective tissue cells. The major ones are osteoblasts, adipocytes (fat cells) and chondrocytes (cartilage cells).
The dermis means "skin". These cells are bone building (osteoblasts) and bone breaking down (osteclasts) and would not be found in the skin but in bone tissue.
Oil glands are found in your skin.
My science teacher was talking about cells and said"bone cells are in your skin" so there is.bone cells in your skin
No, considering in order for that to be possible the bone must pass through several layers of muscle, fat, skin, et cetera.
reproduction
skin cells, muscle cells, and bone cells.
Bone cells.....
in bones
Mature bone cells within the matrix are called osteocytes.
They have many that we have: skin cells, muscle cells, brain cells, nerve cells. and bone cells.
Red blood cells are not found in the skin, but instead in your blood.
They have many that we have: skin cells, muscle cells, brain cells, nerve cells. and bone cells.