How fast do cells grow?

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asked 1 day ago in Science by Hailforde (1,030 points)
How fast do cells grow?

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answered 1 hour ago by Biggerpsi (4,680 points)
How fast cells grow, depends on the type of cells that are growing.

Some cells grow faster than other cells.

New cells grow constantly, although the actual speed of growth of the cells, depends on the type of cells.

Skin cells grow and regenerate within 2 to 4 weeks, gut cells grow and regenerate within 3 to 5 days and other cells can take years to grow and regenerate.

Bone cells can take around 10 years to grow and fully renew and some neuron cells are never replaced,.

On average though, most cells in the human body grow and are replaced every 7 years to 10 years.

Cells can and do reproduce independently through a processed that is called cell division, also known as mitosis or binary fission, in which the cells duplicate their DNA and then split into 2 identical daughter cells.

This process is also what allows single celled organisms to create new organisms and multicellular organisms to grow, replace damaged tissues and also renew stem cells.

Cells go through a cell cycle, which includes the growth or interphase, DNA replication, and division, also known as mitosis/cytokinesis to form identical daughter cells.

And prokaryotes like bacteria divide through binary fission, and eukaryotes divide through mitosis, for growth and repair or meiosis for sexual reproduction.

Healthy cells can also divide on their own and are regulated by internal genetic signals.

And while many cells divide throughout life, other cells like nerve cells, might lose the ability to divide, or are also replaced by special stem cells.

And some cells that are highly specialized cells cannot divide, but are often replaced by stem cells which can.

Cells multiply in your body through a process called mitosis, which causes cells to multiply and meiosis produces distinct sex cells for reproduction.

Cells multiply or divide mainly to enable growth, repair damaged tissues, replace old cells and also to reproduce sexually or asexually.

Without these processes of cells multiplying, life cannot grow, heal or sustain itself.

Multicellular organisms basically start as a single cell and must multiply to grow into complex mature organisms.

All cells come from preexisting cells through division also known as mitosis or binary fission.

New cells are formed when existing cells divide and all living organisms are composed of cells and new cells only come from current cells.

Prokaryotic cells divide through binary fission, and eukaryotic cells use mitosis to produce daughter cells.

All living cells are descended from the first cells, which appeared around 3.5 billion years ago.

During the development of cells, the cells transform from a single fertilized egg called a zygote, into a complex, multicellular organism, through rapid division also known as mitosis, specialization (differentiation), movement (morphogenesis), and organized death, (apoptosis).

These cells as they develop, activate specific gene sequences to become specialized tissues, and eventually form functional organs and structured body parts.

The key processes during a cells development include.

Cell division or proliferation, which is where the zygote divides rapidly to create more cells, transitioning from a single cell to trillions.

Cell differentiation or specialization, unspecialized stem cells turn into specific cell types, like nerve cells, muscle cells or liver cells and they do so by altering their gene expression.

Morphogenesis or patterning, is where the cells migrate and organize themselves into specific shapes, layers and structures like germ layers which constitute organs.

Cell death or apoptosis, which is where programmed cell death occurs, which is crucial for removing unnecessary cells, like the cells between developing fingers or to remove cells that are damaged.

Communication and adhesion, is when cells use signaling molecules or morphogens to coordinate with neighbors and adhesion codes to remain connected.

And as the cells development progresses, the cells become more restricted in their potential and shift from versatile stem cells into permanently specialized adult cells.

A cell develops from a single fertilized egg called a zygote, into complex organisms through a process of division, differentiation and organization that is highly regulated.

Stem cells divide also known as mitosis, and differentiate, switching genes on/off to become specialized, like muscle, nerve, while organizing into tissues and organs under genetic and chemical signals.

Cells reproduce to increase numbers, starting from the zygote and continuing to grow or replace damaged cells.

Stem cells transition from a generic, pluripotent state (able to become any cell) to specialized types of cells like neurons, skin cells, etc, by selectively expressing specific genes.

During morphogenesis, cells organize into organs and tissues, and are guided by signaling molecules or morphogens and adhesion codes that dictate cell placement.

And during developmental potential restriction, early cells are highly flexible (totipotent), although as they divide, they become progressively more restricted to specific roles.

This process of cell development, ensures that from one cell, complex organisms develop the diverse, specialized cells that are required to function.

The growth and development of cells that they undergo between it's birth and reproduction is the cell cycle and involves a growth, which is the interphase and division, which is called mitosis/cytokinesis, which results in 2 identical daughter cells.

Cell growth and development consists of 4 main stages which is the G1 (gap 1/growth), S (DNA synthesis), G2 (gap), and M (mitosis).

The cell spends 90% of it's time in the growth and preparation phase also known as the interphase, growing in size, replicating it's DNA and preparing for division.

Cell development is the highly regulated and also complex process where a single fertilized egg also known as a zygote divides, differentiates and organizes into specialized cells, tissues as well as organs within a multicellular organism.

Cell development involves cellular differentiation, growth and also morphogenesis and is guided by genetic information as well as signaling, transforming immature stem cells into specific types of cells like nervous or muscle cells.

The key things and aspects of cell development are Mitosis or cell division, cell differentiation, morphogenesis and cell growth.

Cell division or mitosis is the process in which one cell divides to produce 2 genetically identical daughter cells, which are essential for growth and repair.

Cell differentiation is the transformation of unspecialized stem cells into specialized cells with specific functions, losing their potency as they mature.

Morphogenesis is the organization of cells into organs and tissues, and is often controlled by adhesion codes and signaling molecules.

And cell growth is the expansion in cell size and often involves increased biosynthesis.

Examples and contexts of cell development include.

Cell line development or biotech, where the use of engineered cells is used to produce therapeutics or proteins in bioreactors.

Tissue regeneration and repair, where adult stem cells replace old or damaged cells in tissues with high turnover.

And embryonic development, in which stem cells differentiated to create all tissue types in an embryo.

The stages of the cell cycle are cells going through the cell cycle, consisting of interphase or growth, DNA and replication and the M phase or mitosis and cytokinesis.

Interphase is when the cells grow, perform functions and duplicate DNA.

Mitosis is when the cell's nucleus splits to ensure each new cell gets a full set of chromosomes.

Cytokinesis is the division of the cytoplasm, separating into two cells.

And the G0 phase is a resting state where the cells don't divide.

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