Lymphopoiesis is not an organelle. it is the process of making white blood cells.
Lymphopoiesis
bone marrow
Lymphopoiesis
bone marrow and lymphatic tissues
Lymphopoiesis is the process by which lymphocytes, a type of white blood cell crucial for the immune system, are produced and developed from precursor cells in the bone marrow and thymus. This process involves several stages, including the differentiation of hematopoietic stem cells into lymphoid progenitor cells, which further mature into B cells in the bone marrow and T cells in the thymus. Lymphopoiesis is essential for maintaining the body's immune response and ensuring the production of diverse lymphocyte populations capable of recognizing various pathogens. Dysregulation of this process can lead to immunodeficiencies or lymphoproliferative disorders.
Prem Singh Jhittay has written: 'In vitro studies on the induction of tolerance during thymic lymphopoiesis'
Lymphopoiesis primarily occurs in the bone marrow and the thymus gland. In the bone marrow, hematopoietic stem cells differentiate into various types of lymphocytes, including B cells and natural killer (NK) cells. T cells, on the other hand, migrate to the thymus to undergo maturation. This process ensures the development of a diverse and functional lymphocyte population crucial for the immune response.
Stem cells responsible for lymphopoiesis are primarily located in the bone marrow. As they differentiate, lymphoid progenitor cells move to the thymus (in the case of T lymphocytes) or remain in the bone marrow (in the case of B lymphocytes) to further mature into functional lymphocytes.
The nucleus is an organelle. It is not found in an organelle.
Which organelle !
Heather Elisabeth Fleming has written: 'Analysis of the regulation of murine B lymphopoiesis by interleukin-7 and the pre-B cell receptor'
Yes it is an organelle. They are in photosynthetic eukariyotes