Yes
Cells grow and divide at an abnormally high rate in cancer. This uncontrolled growth leads to the formation of tumors.
A mutagen could change a gene that tells a cell when to stop growing.
A stem cell becomes cancerous and creates the tumor or other cancer. Most of the other cancer cells either do not divide or only divide slowly. The cancerous stem cells divide and create cancer cells and other cancerous stem cells. Removing the entire cancer but leaving a few of the cancerous stem cells in the body does not cure the cancer.
Lysing a cancer cell during chemotherapy refers to the destruction or breakdown of the cancer cell membrane, leading to cell death. Chemotherapy drugs are designed to target and kill fast-growing cancer cells by interfering with their ability to divide and grow. Lysing cancer cells is a key mechanism by which chemotherapy works to shrink tumors and control cancer growth.
The uncontrolled division of animal cells is called Cancer.
because cancer happens when control over the cell cycle has broken down the cell cycle is the series of events that cells go through as they grow and divide, and cancer is a disorder in which some of the body's cells lose the ability to control growth
Stem cells do not necessarily grow faster than cancer cells. Cancer cells can divide more rapidly and uncontrollably than stem cells, which can contribute to the aggressive nature of cancer growth. However, stem cells have the ability to divide and differentiate into various cell types, while cancer cells typically lose this ability.
they grow and divide
If a cell does not divide, and it is destroyed, it cannot grow back and you will have a cell shortage. Like the brain cell
No. HIV is a virus which invades from outside the body. Cancer is one's own cells inside the body which grow uncontrollably.
The rate of cell division and growth can vary depending on the cell type and environmental conditions. For example, cancer cells typically divide and grow rapidly, while some specialized cells in the human body, such as nerve cells, divide and grow very slowly or not at all.
Loss of control of the cell cycle can lead to uncontrolled cell division, which may result in the development of cancer. This can lead to the formation of tumors, as the cells continue to divide and grow uncontrollably. Moreover, it can also lead to the inhibition of programmed cell death (apoptosis), allowing damaged cells to survive and potentially contribute to disease progression.