kidney
Millions even billions cells in human kidney.
yes
They are cells taken from an embryo in which they can be added to someone to change into a specialised cell. For example if a kidney needed to be replaced then an emryonic stem cell would have the nucleus of a working kidney cell added to it and then would be placed into the kidney of the patient, this will then trigger the reproduction of working kindey cells.
anemia. The kidneys are responsible for producing erythropoietin (EPO), a hormone that stimulates red blood cell production. If kidney disease causes shrinking of the kidney, red blood cell production is reduced
Nucleus, DNA, mitochondrion, and more
tissue cell
the kidney shape is call mined your own bissnus and dont ask me another bloddy queston
it helps make something else
Yes
5 mounth through a proceses called cell rehabellatation
A kidney cell in G1 interphase is diploid, meaning it contains two sets of chromosomes (one set from each parent). This is because diploid cells have a complete set of chromosomes necessary for normal cell function and division.