Original Description:
Anonymous Mon 16 Sep 2024 16:03:23 No.41422017
1MiB, 2058x1969, Red blood clel.png
Guys help! The mares are inside me!
>>3446017t
Anonymous Thu 19 Sep 2024 03:46:58 No.41430786 236
>>41430760
When your cells divide, or come in contact with a mutagenic chemical, they can acquire mutations. Sometimes, those mutations are harmless and the daughter cells continue behaving normally. Sometimes the mutations have a detrimental effect and the daughter behave abnormally, but are not yet dangerous. Sometimes the mutation is lethal and the daughter cells die. Sometimes the mutation causes them to ignore intercellular signaling and multiply/spread out of control (as the other Anon explained). The latter is cancer. So, this can get really complicated.Anonymous Thu 19 Sep 2024 03:57:49 No.41430811 238
>>41430786
This. All cells are strictly speaking immortal from the outset, multicellular organisms evolved the capability to signal cells to die at a certain age or when problems are detected with it, since that behaviour is beneficial for the larger organism. It keeps you running long enough to reproduce, which is the survival strategy most cells go for rather than immortality. Survival through propagation gives rise to adaptation, which cancer cells are incapable of, they don’t react to their environment at the macroscopic level.Anonymous Thu 19 Sep 2024 04:46:29 No.41430895 240
>>41430786
>>41430811
Cute little anarchist cancer mares that don’t listen to authorities.Anonymous Thu 19 Sep 2024 12:56:45 No.41431642 247
>>41430895
Seconding. Little punk aesthetic mares with “Never Say Die” t shirts and crab tattoos.Anonymous Thu 19 Sep 2024 16:55:08 No.41432093 254
IMG_1150.png, 2MiB, 2520x1312*
>>41430895
>>3450102tAnonymous Fri 20 Sep 2024 14:27:51 No.41434995 295
roadhouse.png, 2MiB, 1664x2671
(You) can find the cure for cancer and save the mares.