Yes if a person touch any of the cell anywhere in his body the signal receptors on the cell will send a message to brain that someone touched on the skin. It is actually impossible for someone to touch aal the body cells because millions of cell make up the skin of your body.
no there not e.g
there are many more in the hand than the back and they are closer together in the hand because it is the part of the body we feel most of the world with
unevenly
yes
Dermis
Nerve cell
Stem cells are undifferentiated, which means that they can become anything. A skin cell is only a skin cell, a nerve cell is only a nerve cell, and a skin cell can't do what a nerve cell does, or vice versa. But a stem cell can become either a skin cell or a nerve cell, or any other cell your body has.
Nerve cells will most likely NOT continue to divide.
thedwrrffretjyk
nerve tissue
Dermis
skin cells and skin tissues
Nerve cell
skin blood stem muscle nerve cells
Stem cells are undifferentiated, which means that they can become anything. A skin cell is only a skin cell, a nerve cell is only a nerve cell, and a skin cell can't do what a nerve cell does, or vice versa. But a stem cell can become either a skin cell or a nerve cell, or any other cell your body has.
Nerve cells will most likely NOT continue to divide.
Differentiation
They have many that we have: skin cells, muscle cells, brain cells, nerve cells. and bone cells.
They have many that we have: skin cells, muscle cells, brain cells, nerve cells. and bone cells.
thedwrrffretjyk
The upper layer of the skin is called the 'epidermis'. In birds, it contains no nerve cells, and their Merkel cells are located in the dermis. However, in most animals it contains a scattering of nerve cells called Merkel cells, located at the basal layer. The middle layer of the skin is called the 'dermis.' It contins blood vessels, most of the nerve cells, and other structures. The lower layer of the skin is called the 'sub-cutis' and mostly contains fat.