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Key points

  • Stem cells are cells in animals that can continuously undergo cell division.
  • are made from embryonic stem cells which can develop into any cell type.
  • Adult stem cells are found only in specific areas of the body and can only develop into a limited number of cell types.
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Stem cells

Video

Can you answer these questions based on the video?

1. How many cells are in an early embryo?

2. What do bone marrow stem cells make?

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Cell differentiation

Stem cells are cells that have not yet become specialised for a specific function. This process is called cell differentiation.

There are two types of stem cells in humans:

  • Embryonic stem cells.
  • Adult stem cells.

Embryonic stem cells

A small bundle of cells called an embryo, made from embryonic stem cells.
Image caption,
A small bundle of cells made from embryonic stem cells is called an embryo.

When a sperm fertilises an ovum (egg cell) a is formed. This cell divides into two cells, then four, eight and so on. After several weeks a small bundle of cells is formed which is called an . This is made from . These are unusual cells because they are able to differentiate, or turn into all the different types of cell that make a human.

A small bundle of cells called an embryo, made from embryonic stem cells.
Image caption,
A small bundle of cells made from embryonic stem cells is called an embryo.
Three question marks

Did you know?

There are over two hundred different types of specialised cell that make a human.

Three question marks

Adult stem cells

The name is a little misleading because these are found in children as well. All stem cells that develop after the embryonic stem cells have differentiated are adult stem cells. These are different from embryonic stem cells because they are only able to differentiate into a limited number of cell types.

Adult stem cells only grow in specific parts of the body including: , breasts, intestines, fat tissue, brain, nose, and testes. These cells can only differentiate into the cells that grow in that region. So you could not take adult stem cells from the intestines and grow them into blood cells, for example.

An illustration of the human body showing adult stem cells in the bone marrow in the leg, testes, fat, breast, nose, brain, hair.
Figure caption,
Where adult stem cells are located in the human body
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Plant stem cells

Plants also have stem cells. Their stem cells are only found in specific areas called at the tips of their roots and shoots. Unlike adult stem cells, all plant stem cells can differentiate into all cell types.

Plant stem cells are only found in meristems. The illustration shows the shoot tip and the division of cells.
Figure caption,
Plant stem cells are only found in meristems
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Uses of stem cells

Adult stem cells in humans have been used to treat diseases like and other cancers of the blood and bone marrow by transplants. Theoretically the use of stem cells could treat a large range of diseases like , and brain and spinal cord injuries. However this is proving difficult to do. Because adult stem cells can only differentiate into one or several cell types they are not as useful as embryonic stem cells. However the use of embryonic stem cells has clinical, and social issues associated with them.

The use of plant stem cells does not have the same issues. All plant stem cells can differentiate into all cell types.

This means a gardener can take a of a plant stem with a small number of leaves and place it into compost. Root cells will often grow from the bottom of the stem and form a new plant. This is genetically identical to the parent plant and so is a . This process allows large numbers of copies of rare, valuable or beautiful plants to be grown quickly and easily.

An image showing the process of taking a cutting. The gardener takes a cutting from a large plant, puts it in a pot of soil. The plant grows larger. There are multiple plants.
Figure caption,
The process of taking a cutting to produce clones
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Test your knowledge

Quiz

Test questions

How are embryonic and adult stem cells different?

List some of the arguments for and against the use of stem cells.

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Play the Atomic Labs game! game

Try out practical experiments in this KS3 science game.

Play the Atomic Labs game!
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