The O and P teloblasts are specified from two separate but identical precursors, which form an
equivalence group. These two precursor cells are termed O/P cells for their ability to become either O or P teloblasts. Signals from the surrounding cells act to specify which fate the teloblasts and their progeny take on. Interactions with the q bandlet, however transient, can induce the p fate in the adjacent o/p bandlet. In some species (i.e.
Helobdella triserialis), the provisional epithelium covering the cells plays a role in inducing the O fate. In the absence of cell-cell interactions, the O/P precursors will become O teloblasts. O and P bandlets exhibit very different mitotic patterns (see figure) which are used to identify them in experimental manipulations. Experimental results in
Tubifex hattai suggest that there is not an equivalence group for O and P in these worms, but instead the P lineage is committed at its birth from the O/P proteloblast stage, while the O lineage is induced by the P teloblast. In the absence of the P teloblast, the
pluripotent O teloblast becomes P specified. In
Helobdella, the O/P proteloblasts generate four blast cells with segmental progeny by
asymmetric division before a symmetric division into O/P teloblasts. in addition to
bone morphogenic protein molecular signaling that is sourced from Q lineage cells and also helps specify P fate. == Segmental fates ==