Biology, asked by ajaykumarmouryacsc, 1 month ago

What do fibroblasts, chondroblasts, osteoblasts and hemocytoblasts have in common?​

Answers

Answered by itztaesprincessliza
1

Answer:

Connective tissues come in a vast variety of forms, yet they typically have in common three characteristic components: cells, large amounts of amorphous ground substance, and protein fibers.

Answered by arshaarunsl
0

Answer:

They are all immature cells.

Explanation:

  • The prefix "-blast" suggests that these cells are still in the differentiation stage. They are young because of this.
  • A developing cell that has the potential to become any form of blood cell, including platelets, red blood cells, and white blood cells.
  • Peripheral blood and bone marrow both contain blood stem cells. Likewise known as hematopoietic stem cell.

Fibroblasts

  • The most prevalent type of cell found in connective tissue is the fibroblast.

Chondroblasts

  • Cells called chondroblasts, also known as perichondral cells, are crucial for the development of cartilage (AKA chondrogenesis).

Osteoblasts

  • Specialized mesenchymal cells called osteoblasts produce bone matrix and regulate the skeleton's mineralization.

Hemocytoblasts

  • According to the monophyletic view of blood cell creation, all blood cells, including erythrocytes and leukocytes, develop from the hemocytoblast, a generic stem cell.

Final answer:

Common for fibroblasts, chondroblasts, osteoblasts and hemocytoblasts is all are immature cells.

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