Not exact matches
But it seemed unlikely, because the body coverings were
thought to grow differently: Feathers and
hair develop from specialized plates
of thickened ectoderm — an embryonic
cell layer — called anatomical placodes, structures not seen in reptiles.
It was
thought that the body repairs wounds such as bed sores and burns by generating new skin
cells from
hair follicles or the skin at the edges
of the wound — the same way that other animals do.
TTD - specific cutaneous and anaemic features, on the other hand, are
thought to result from a specific kind
of transcriptional insufficiency caused by depletion
of unstable TFIIH during the terminal differentiation
of skin,
hair - shaft, and blood
cells [16,24].
When you
think about the building blocks
of the
cells that make up your skin,
hair, nails and body tissues, it all comes down to what you eat.
Just
think of the volume
of snot that is produced, the volume
of ejaculate, the volume
of hair, fingernails, skin
cells,... it gets stupid, really!