Sometimes these cells travel to other parts of the body and grow into germ cell tumors.
Mesenchymal morphology allows the cells to travel to specific targets in the embryo, where they differentiate and/or induce differentiation of other cells.
Uniquely, the cells travel tangential to the brain surface, parallel to the pial surfaces rather than radially like most developing neurons.
These cells travel through your body to reach every organ.
These cells enters the blood vessels and travel across the body.
Typically, cells of six or seven mules travel to a city with one or two controllers, who buy their tickets and provide the checks to forge.
In the womb, their placentas grow quickly and fuse, creating a network of blood vessels through which cells can travel from one twin to the other.
If the donor and recipient are compatible, these infused cells will then travel to the bone marrow and initiate blood cell production.
Those cells may also travel to locations in the body where they are not normally needed, which means the cancer is malignant.
Eventually, cells from the tumor can travel elsewhere in the body (metastasize) through the blood or lymphatic system.