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Progenitor CellsPartially commited cells found in all tissues that are still able to proliferate, and have not yet commited to terminal differentiation down one (unipotent) or more (multipotent) lineages.
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Progenitor CellsRelatively undifferentiated Cells that retain the ability to divide and proLiferate throughout postnatal Life to provide progenitor Cells that can differentiate into specialized Cells.
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Progenitor CellsThe Parent Cells that give rise to both Cells of the Granulocyte lineage and Cells of the Monocyte/Macrophage lineage.
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Progenitor CellsProgenitor Cells from which all Blood Cells derive.
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Progenitor CellsStem Cells from which B-Lymphocytes; T-Lymphocytes; Natural Killer Cells; and some Dendritic Cells derive.
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Progenitor CellsThe Parent Cells that give rise to Cells in the Megakaryocyte lineage, and ultimately Blood Platelets.
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Progenitor CellsThe Parent Cells that give rise to both Cells of the Megakaryocyte and the Erythrocyte lineages.
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Progenitor CellsMultipotent Stem Cells that can develop into distinct mesenchymal Tissue such as BONE; Tendons; Muscles; Adipose Tissue; Cartilage; NERVE Tissue; and Blood and Blood Vessels. They are generally derive [..]
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Progenitor CellsStem Cells derived from Hematopoietic Stem Cells. Derived from these myeloid Progenitor Cells are the Megakaryocytes; Erythroid Cells; Myeloid Cells; and some Dendritic Cells.
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Progenitor CellsProgenitor cells are cells that are similar to stem cells but instead of the ability to become any type of cell, they are already predisposed to develop into a particular type of cell.
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