no they will be no harmed
Stem cells.
Stem cells
No, babies do not die when their stem cells are removed. Stem cells can be collected from umbilical cord blood or other tissues without harm to the baby, and the procedure is typically safe and painless. This practice allows for valuable stem cells to be stored for potential future medical use.
No. But if you kill or remove the cancer, the tissues/organs that were removed can be replaced or regenerated with stem cells.
Stem cells
Once stem cells are removed from the embryo, the remaining embryo cannot develop into a fetus because the stem cells are essential for its growth and differentiation. The embryo is typically discarded after the stem cell extraction process.
Heart
The correct order is: zygote, stem cells, and then mitosis. The zygote is formed after fertilization and undergoes several rounds of mitosis to divide and develop into a multicellular organism. During this process, some cells differentiate into stem cells, which can further differentiate into various cell types. Mitosis continues to occur as the organism grows and develops.
Are called stem cells. These cells are either totipotent (can give rise to all types of cells of that organism) or pluripotent (can give rise to many, but not all types of cells of that organism).
they found a way to obtain stem cells without destroying an embryo - this removed all ethical concerns that were present for the use of embryonic stem cells
A stem is thing that hold up the flower. stem can also mean like diverge stems are dis and verge that is what another meaning of stem is. stem cells are used to to produce, fix or replace other cells and are capable of forming a whole organism STEM is an acronym for Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics
What kind(s) of cells can develop from multipotent stem cells?A. Only cells that are closely related to the original stem cell B. Only cells that are identical to the original stem cell C. Any cells of the human body or the placenta D. Any cells of the human body. but not cells of the placenta