Everything about Sclerotome totally explained
A
sclerotome is part of a
somite, a structure in vertebrate
embryonic development. Sclerotomes eventually differentiate into the
vertebrae and most of the
skull. The caudal half of one sclerotome fuses with the cranial half of the adjacent one to form each vertebra.
From their initial location within the somite, the sclerotome cells migrate medially towards the notochord. These cells meet the sclerotome cells from the other side to form the vertebral body. From this vertebral body, sclerotome cells move dorsally and surround the developing spinal cord, forming the vertebral arch.
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