Each new cell (produced when a stem cell divides) has the potential to remain a stem cell or to develop into a specialised cell such as a blood cell or a muscle cell (by a process known as differentiation)
Embryonic stem cells that can differentiate into any cell type found in an embryo but are not able to differentiate into extra-embryonic cells (the cells that make up the placenta)
Having differentiated and specialised to fulfil particular roles, most adult cells gradually lose the ability to divide until, eventually, they are no longer able to divide
Small numbers remain to produce new cells for the essential processes of growth, cell replacement and tissue repair
Although these adult stem cells can divide (by mitosis) an unlimited number of times, they are only able to produce a limited range of cell types - they are multipotent