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Typical neurons are not able to perform mitosis after maturity. a patient has just been diagnosed with brain cancer and is undergoing treatment. based on what you know about cell division and cancer, why does this seem unusual?

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User Arthur
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A general cell goes through the mutations to turn into a cancerous substance as it differentiates, and there are replication errors related to each cycle. Additionally, the environmental elements may also donate to the mutations that acclimatize in the mitotically active cells.

However, the neural cells are quiescent and do not undergo the process of mitosis, and thus, cannot encounter with a cell cycle associated mutational incident that results in cancer. Hence, it is unusual.


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User Monocell
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