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Question
- occasionally cells stop dividing and enter another phase, g₀. if you damage your liver, new liver cells can be produced to replace up to 75% of the liver. however, if you sustain brain damage, your body does not produce new brain cells. explain this observation using what you have learned about the cell cycle.
Liver cells enter the reversible $G_0$ phase, meaning they can re-enter the cell cycle (via growth signals from injury) to divide and regenerate damaged tissue. Most mature brain cells enter a permanent, non-reversible $G_0$ state; they lose the ability to re-activate cell division pathways, so no new cells are produced to replace damaged ones.
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Liver cells are in a reversible $G_0$ phase, so they can re-enter the cell cycle and divide to regenerate damaged tissue. In contrast, mature brain cells are in a permanent, non-dividing $G_0$ phase and cannot re-initiate cell division, which is why the body cannot produce new brain cells to replace damaged ones.