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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

from
dedifferentiated
mature
cells
at
the
injury
site,
resident
stem
or
progenitor
cells,
or
a
combination
of
both.
The
formation
and
activity
of
a
blastema
are
influenced
by
local
signaling
pathways,
the
presence
of
nerves,
and
the
extracellular
matrix.
In
some
species,
nerve-derived
factors
are
essential
for
blastema
formation
and
successful
regeneration.
blastema
that
eventually
differentiates
into
bone,
muscle,
nerves,
and
connective
tissue.
Similar
regenerative
programs
occur
in
zebrafish
fin
regeneration
and,
in
planarians,
in
which
neoblasts
form
a
regenerating
blastema.
In
plants,
the
term
is
also
used
in
a
related
sense
to
describe
a
mass
of
cells
from
which
new
organs
may
arise
during
regeneration
or
growth.
point
for
research
into
tissue
formation
and
regenerative
medicine.