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  2. Germ cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germ_cell

    Germ cells produce gametes and are the only cells that can undergo meiosis as well as mitosis. Somatic cells are all the other cells that form the building blocks of the body and they only divide by mitosis. The lineage of germ cells is called the germline. Germ cell specification begins during cleavage in many animals or in the epiblast during ...

  3. Germ plasm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germ_plasm

    Germ plasm (‹See Tfd› German: Keimplasma) is a biological concept developed in the 19th century by the German biologist August Weismann. It states that heritable information is transmitted only by germ cells in the gonads (ovaries and testes), not by somatic cells. The related idea that information cannot pass from somatic cells to the germ ...

  4. Germline - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germline

    Contents. Germline. In biology and genetics, the germline is the population of a multicellular organism 's cells that develop into germ cells. In other words, they are the cells that form gametes (eggs and sperm), which can come together to form a zygote. They differentiate in the gonads from primordial germ cells into gametogonia, which ...

  5. History of genetics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_genetics

    The history of genetics dates from the classical era with contributions by Pythagoras, Hippocrates, Aristotle, Epicurus, and others. Modern genetics began with the work of the Augustinian friar Gregor Johann Mendel. His works on pea plants, published in 1866, provided the initial evidence that, on its rediscovery in 1900's, helped to establish ...

  6. Germline development - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germline_development

    Cleavage in most animals segregates cells containing germ plasm from other cells. The germ plasm effectively turns off gene expression to render the genome of the cell inert. Cells expressing germ plasm become primordial germ cells (PGCs) which will then give rise to the gametes. The germ line development in mammals, on the other hand, occurs ...

  7. Weismann barrier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weismann_barrier

    The Weismann barrier, proposed by August Weismann, is the strict distinction between the "immortal" germ cell lineages producing gametes and "disposable" somatic cells in animals (but not plants), in contrast to Charles Darwin 's proposed pangenesis mechanism for inheritance. [1][2] In more precise terminology, hereditary information is copied ...

  8. Evolution of cells - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution_of_cells

    The eukaryotic cell seems to have evolved from a symbiotic community of prokaryotic cells. DNA-bearing organelles like mitochondria and chloroplasts are remnants of ancient symbiotic oxygen-breathing bacteria and cyanobacteria , respectively, where at least part of the rest of the cell may have been derived from an ancestral archaean prokaryote ...

  9. August Weismann - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/August_Weismann

    The hereditary material, the germ plasm, is transmitted only by the gonads. Somatic cells (of the body) develop afresh in each generation from the germ plasm. Weismann's work on the demarcation between germ-line and soma can scarcely be appreciated without considering the work of (mostly) German biologists during the second half of the 19th ...