Examples of stratum germinativum in the following topics:
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- The epidermis includes five main layers: the stratum corneum, stratum lucidium, stratum granulosum, stratum spinosum, and stratum germinativum.
- The stratum basale, also called the
stratum germinativum, is the basal (base) layer of the epidermis.
- This is because it contains the only cells of
the epidermis that can divide via the process of mitosis, which means that skin cells germinate here, hence the
word germinativum.
- From the stratum basale, the keratinocytes move into the
stratum spinosum, a layer so called because its cells are spiny-shaped cells.
- Once the keratinocytes leave the stratum granulosum, they
die and help form the stratum lucidum.
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- The deepest of the epidermal layers is called the stratum basale or
stratum germinativum.
- The amount of carotene found in the stratum corneum of the
epidermis and the deepest layer of the skin, the hypodermis.
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- Vitamin D is produced in the two innermost strata of the epidermis, the stratum basale and stratum spinosum.
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- The blood vessels in the dermis provide nourishment and remove waste from its own cells and from the stratum basale of the epidermis.
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- This cavity is roofed in by a single stratum of flattened, ectodermal cells called the amniotic ectoderm.
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- The outer stratum forms a syncytium, which is a layer of protoplasm studded with nuclei but showing no evidence of subdivision into cells (termed the syncytiotrophoblast).
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- Here, stratum basale
epithelial cells divide via mitosis to form the hair.