Liver cells
A stem cell could be absolutely any cell that they are surrounded by, for instance a doctor could use Stem cells and place them in broken heart muscle fibers and those stem cells would become heart muscle cells, repairing the location as they assimilate with the surrounding cells. the same goes for other types of cells, such as organ and even skin cells. so to put the answer of your question in short, a doctor can use stem cells for nearly anything in his field:)
The heart cells are muscle, the type called involuntary muscle.
The cell fractionation
Not at this time but there are papers written about how it might be done.
Plasma
cardiac cells are specialized muscle cells brain cells are nerve cells
no, heart cells and bone cells are mature and cannot change into each other. However, a stem cell can become a heart cell or bone cell or any other cell depending on where in the body it is.
Most cells in the heart are cardiac muscle cells.
A stem cell could be absolutely any cell that they are surrounded by, for instance a doctor could use Stem cells and place them in broken heart muscle fibers and those stem cells would become heart muscle cells, repairing the location as they assimilate with the surrounding cells. the same goes for other types of cells, such as organ and even skin cells. so to put the answer of your question in short, a doctor can use stem cells for nearly anything in his field:)
The heart cells are muscle, the type called involuntary muscle.
Cells produce an enormous amount of molecules of which some (many) act as messengers and activators or inhibitors. When heart cells receive stimulation from other heart cells with certain molecules, they "know" what they are and that they should keep on being heart cells.
The cell fractionation
Cardiac muscle cell, skeletal muscle cell, smooth muscle cell, fat cell, neuron, stratified squamous epithelial cell, ciliated epithelial cell, bone cell, neutrophil, and erythrocyte(red blood cell)
brain cells are activated by brain genes and heart cells are activated by heart genes. that's how they function, by their genes
The most important cells are the cardiac muscles cells that do the pumping.
No, the cells in the skin of your hand are different in size and function compared to the cells in your heart. Skin cells (keratinocytes) are relatively small and serve a protective function, while heart cells (cardiomyocytes) are larger and are specialized for contracting to pump blood.
Not at this time but there are papers written about how it might be done.