Yes.
The cells which are involved in the production of antibodies are known as B cells. These are effector cells which will secrete anybodies and activate the antigens.
B-cells produces antibodies that target specific pathogens so t-cells can then recognize it and consume it.
Activated B cells, called plasma cells, are responsible for producing antibodies
Naiive B cells are lymphocytes that have not yet been exposed to antigen. Once it can identify a particular antigen, it will undergo production of antibodies and become a mature B cell. Mature B cells are split into two categories: plasma B cells and memory B cells. Plasma B cells will continue to produce large amounts of antibodies. Memory B cells are stored so that the next time you encounter the same antigen, it can start producing antibodies much quicker because it remembered from the previous encounter.
B cells make antibodies when they recognize antigens.
No they do not. B cells synthesize the antibodies.
There are various cells and organs that plays a vital role in the production of antibodies. Primarily the white blood cells also called as lymphocytes converts to immunoblasts and then convert to plasma cells, from which the antibodies are thus produced. T-cells and B-cells are antigen specific and produce the antibodies based on the structure and pathogenticity of an antigen. The immune response varies from one antigen to the other.
antibodies are produced by plasma cells of B-cells.
Lymphocytes are a type of white blood cell that play a crucial role in the immune response, and they include B cells and T cells. B cells, when activated, can differentiate into plasma cells, which produce antibodies that help fight infections. The term "blastocyst" refers to an early stage of embryonic development, not a type of lymphocyte. Therefore, it is B cells that are involved in antibody production, not blastocysts.
B cells, about one-eighth of the circulating lymphocytes, mature into plasma cells. Plasma cells are responsible for the production and secretion of antibodies, soluble proteins that are also known as immunoglobulins.
B cells, plasma cells, and antibodies are all part of the immune system. B cells are a type of white blood cell that produce antibodies when activated by antigens. Plasma cells are a mature form of B cells that secrete large amounts of antibodies. Antibodies are proteins produced by B cells that help to neutralize pathogens and foreign substances in the body.
B cells (humoral immunity) differentiate into plasma cells which synthesize antibodies.