
thumb|300px|Myoblasts (cells with a single nucleus, represented in violet) fusing together to form Skeletal muscle#Skeletal muscle cells|muscle fibers (multinucleated muscle cells) during myogenesis
thumb|300px|Myoblasts (cells with a single nucleus, represented in violet) fusing together to form Skeletal muscle#Skeletal muscle cells|muscle fibers (multinucleated muscle cells) during myogenesis
Myogenesis is the formation of skeletal muscular tissue, particularly during embryonic development. Muscle fibers generally form through the fusion of precursor myoblasts into multinucleated fibers called myotubes. In the early development of an embryo, myoblasts can either proliferate, or differentiate into a myotube. What controls this choice in vivo is generally unclear. If placed in cell culture, most myoblasts will proliferate if enough fibroblast growth factor (FGF) or another growth factor is present in the medium surrounding the cells. When the growth factor runs out, the myoblasts cease division and undergo terminal differentiation into myotubes.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).