melanocytes

(noun)

Cells that help protect our body from radiological damage.

Related Terms

  • vitamin D
  • Langerhans cells
  • adaptive immune system
  • anatomical barrier
  • cuticle

Examples of melanocytes in the following topics:

  • Vitiligo

    • Vitiligo is a disorder characterized by patchy loss of skin pigmentation due to the immune system attacking melanocytes in the skin.
    • Vitiligo is a disorder characterized by patchy loss of skin pigmentation due to the immune system attacking melanocytes, the melanin-producing cells of the skin .
    • Variations in genes that are part of the immune system or part of melanocytes have both been associated with vitiligo.
    • Another technique transplants melanocytes to vitiligo affected areas, effectively repigmenting the region.
  • Skin Color

    • Skin color is determined largely by the amount of melanin pigment produced by melanocytes in the skin.
    • In this layer lie important cells called melanocytes. 
    • Melanocytes are irregularly shaped cells that produce and store a pigment called melanin.
    • People with darker skin have more active melanocytes compared to people with lighter skin. 
    • The transfer of melanin from melanocytes to keratinocytes occurs thanks to the long tentacles each melanocyte extends to upwards of 40 keratinocytes. 
  • Albinism

    • Individuals with albinism posses melanocytes, the melanin-producing cell of the skin, but their melanocytes are unable to produce melanin.
  • Overview of the Body's Surface

    • The average square inch (6.5 cm²) of skin holds 650 sweat glands, 20 blood vessels, 60,000 melanocytes, and more than 1,000 nerve endings Fig .
    • Skin Structure.Skin has mesodermal cells, pigmentation, or melanin provided by melanocytes, which absorb some of the potentially dangerous ultraviolet radiation (UV) in sunlight.
  • Nails

    • This portion of the nail does not have any melanocytes, or melanin producing cells.
    • The nail bed contains the blood vessels, nerves, and melanocytes, or melanin-producing cells.
  • Development of the Integumentary System

    • Melanoblasts that will form melanocytes migrate with neural crests cells to the epithelium and begin producing melanin prior to birth.
  • Development of the Peripheral Nervous System

    • Neural crest cells are a transient, multipotent, migratory cell population unique to vertebrates that gives rise to a diverse cell lineage including melanocytes, craniofacial cartilage and bone, smooth muscle, peripheral and enteric neurons and glia.
  • Horner's Syndrome

    • This happens because a lack of sympathetic stimulation in childhood interferes with melanin pigmentation of the melanocytes of the iris.
  • What is Skin?

    • This layer also contains melanocytes, the cells that are largely responsible for determining the color of our skin and protecting our skin from the harmful effects of UV radiation. 
  • Hair

    • The hair bulb also contains cells called melanocytes that produce various kinds of melanin pigments. 
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