How do tumors grow things like eyes, teeth, brain tissue and organs when the human body often can’t grow those by itself?

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There was a post about a woman who grew a “homonculus tumor”, with brain tissue, teeth, a spinal nerves and other organs. But how? Human bodies can’t grow those things after birth, AFAIK. For example, once your adult teeth are in, that’s it. So how are tumors able to do this? Are the cells in tumors different from those found normally in human body?

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Anonymous 0 Comments

Does this mean a tumor could have a gender?

Anonymous 0 Comments

“Are cells in tumors different…?”

Yes, that’s why they’re tumors.

Anonymous 0 Comments

I just had one removed. It had totally taken over my left ovary and grown from about the size of a pea to larger than a baseball in just over four years. Big ball of blond hair and four adult sized teeth on a mandible. Freaking creepy. And yes – my hormones were totally whacked out and it had been twisting back and forth on my Fallopian tube. I’m so relieved to have it out! Sometimes you don’t even know how much pain you’re in until you aren’t in it anymore!

Anonymous 0 Comments

The “homonculus tumor” you mention was a fake, by the way… so that explains how that worked. Others in the comments have explained the real thing

Anonymous 0 Comments

Oh boy. I’m not seeing a good answer so far so I’ll weigh in. This is a special kind of tumor called a teratoma. They can form because we set aside a type of stem cell early in embryonic development especially to create sperm and eggs later on. These special cells are set aside *early* enough that they closely resemble the stem cells that give rise to…everything, at least in terms of their genetic expression programs and the marks on their DNA that allow or disallow certain gene programs to activate.

What also makes these cells interesting is that they have to migrate quite far to get to the future ovary or teste. Many get lost along the way during embryonic development and kind of die, but sometimes, and very rarely, they don’t die. These lost migratory cells can become a tumor if they also acquire mutations that let them grow out of control. Likewise, some of these develop from the same cells that do make it to the future testes or ovaries but don’t quite get integrated properly into either their cellular homes or don’t activate the right programs to restrict their properties down to just a future sperm or egg producing cell.

Since these cells don’t have the program restrictions to tell them to be one or a few types of cells, they have a tendency to just activate all of them, chaotically and in patches. Teeth, hair and nerves are a pretty good default program that many go down the path of. This is also why stem cells in a dish, if neglected, have the same tendency to become the cells that are precursors to skin and nerves. They are simply a good “if no signal otherwise, just make this” type of category of cells. However under the right circumstances the conditions are right for even more complicated cells types to arise from the lost and very capable cells that make up teratomas.

All in all, it’s quite a lot of hurdles and jumps to get through for all of this to happen. Even if they do, most are so small and benign that you’d never encounter any reason to be aware of their existence in your lifetime. It’s only the marvels that make headlines.