blastemata
Blastemata is the plural form of blastema, a mass of undifferentiated cells capable of growth and regeneration into organs or tissues. In biology, blastemas arise during epimorphic regeneration, a process in which a damaged body part is rebuilt rather than simply repaired. The blastema serves as a progenitor cell pool that can proliferate and later differentiate to form the structures of the missing part.
Cells within a blastema originate from different sources depending on the organism and context. They may derive
Classic examples appear in vertebrates such as salamanders, where limb or tail regeneration involves a limb
Blastemata, as a term, highlights the regenerative potential shared by diverse organisms and remains a focal