enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Template:Cell biology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Cell_biology

    Diagram of an animal cell and its constituent organelles. --> ... (Golgi body) t. ... An example of the template with all diagrams activated.

  3. B cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B_cell

    Their function is to circulate through the body and initiate a stronger, more rapid antibody response (known as the anamnestic secondary antibody response) if they detect the antigen that had activated their parent B cell (memory B cells and their parent B cells share the same BCR, thus they detect the same antigen). [26]

  4. Lymphopoiesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lymphopoiesis

    However, T and B lymphocytes are very distinct cell lineages and they ‘grow up’ in different places in the body. They perform quite different (although co-operative) functions in the body. No evidence has ever been found that T and B cells can ever interconvert. T and B cells are biochemically distinct and this is reflected in the differing ...

  5. Lymphocyte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lymphocyte

    A lymphocyte is a type of white blood cell (leukocyte) in the immune system of most vertebrates. [1] Lymphocytes include T cells (for cell-mediated and cytotoxic adaptive immunity), B cells (for humoral, antibody-driven adaptive immunity), [2] [3] and innate lymphoid cells (ILCs; "innate T cell-like" cells involved in mucosal immunity and homeostasis), of which natural killer cells are an ...

  6. List of human cell types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_human_cell_types

    The Human Cell Atlas project, which started in 2016, had as one of its goals to "catalog all cell types (for example, immune cells or brain cells) and sub-types in the human body". [13] By 2018, the Human Cell Atlas description based the project on the assumption that "our characterization of the hundreds of types and subtypes of cells in the ...

  7. Myeloid tissue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myeloid_tissue

    Thus, although all blood cells, even lymphocytes, are normally born in the bone marrow in adults, myeloid cells in the narrowest sense of the term can be distinguished from lymphoid cells, that is, lymphocytes, which come from common lymphoid progenitor cells that give rise to B cells and T cells. [2]

  8. Follicular B helper T cells - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Follicular_B_helper_T_cells

    Follicular helper T cells (also known as T follicular helper cells and abbreviated as T FH), are antigen-experienced CD4 + T cells found in the periphery within B cell follicles of secondary lymphoid organs such as lymph nodes, spleen and Peyer's patches, and are identified by their constitutive expression of the B cell follicle homing receptor CXCR5. [1]

  9. Polyclonal B cell response - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyclonal_B_cell_response

    The entire mechanism ensures that an activated T cell only stimulates a B cell that recognizes the antigen containing the same epitope as recognized by the T cell receptor of the "costimulating" T helper cell. The B cell gets stimulated, apart from the direct costimulation, by certain growth factors, viz., interleukins 2, 4, 5, and 6 in a ...