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The term "fetus" refers to the stage of development after the embryo. The two-cell stage of development comes well before the embryonic stage. There is no point at which a fetus, by definition, has two cells.
Sacrifice a embryo at the blastocoel stage. Obtain the stem cells from the blastomere.
8 cell stage
adult body cells have a function where as embryonic stem cells have no set function as of that stage. now there are some adult stem cells and those have little to no difference than embryonic stem cells
Adult stem cells are harvested from newborn's cord blood or human bone marrow while embryo stem cells come from the inner cell mass of a human embryo. No fetus is killed to use the stem cells, but the embryo cannot function and must be destroyed without a inner cell mass.
The term "fetus" refers to the stage of development after the embryo. The two-cell stage of development comes well before the embryonic stage. There is no point at which a fetus, by definition, has two cells.
A solid ball of cells is called a morula. A morula is an embryo that is at an early stage of embryonic development.
the blastula is an early stage of embryonic development in animals. its a hollow sphere of cells surrounding an inner fluid-filled cavity called the blastocoele formed during an early stage of embryonic development in animals
Sacrifice a embryo at the blastocoel stage. Obtain the stem cells from the blastomere.
8 cell stage
adult body cells have a function where as embryonic stem cells have no set function as of that stage. now there are some adult stem cells and those have little to no difference than embryonic stem cells
adult body cells have a function where as embryonic stem cells have no set function as of that stage. now there are some adult stem cells and those have little to no difference than embryonic stem cells
blastula
egg , baby, youth, adult, death?Are you sure that's right?
embryonic
embryonic
The embryonic stage is a typical stage in development for animals that reproduce sexually, and it has stood the test of evolution in several species.