Asked by Void<3
How do cells respond if a complex organism is injured?(1 point)
Responses
Cells work to repair the injured area through meiosis.
Cells work to repair the injured area through meiosis.
Nearby cells change into stem cells in order to repair the injury.
Nearby cells change into stem cells in order to repair the injury.
Cells rush to the damaged area, proliferate through mitosis, and work to repair the injury.
Cells rush to the damaged area, proliferate through mitosis, and work to repair the injury.
Cells form a blastocyst that contributes to the healing of the injury.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Cells rush to the damaged area, proliferate through mitosis, and work to repair the injury.
Explanation: Repair in complex organisms involves cell division by mitosis (not meiosis), recruitment of nearby cells and immune cells, and tissue remodeling. Blastocysts are an embryonic stage and nearby cells generally do not turn into stem cells in typical adult injury.
Explanation: Repair in complex organisms involves cell division by mitosis (not meiosis), recruitment of nearby cells and immune cells, and tissue remodeling. Blastocysts are an embryonic stage and nearby cells generally do not turn into stem cells in typical adult injury.
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