Red blood cells, white blood cells
blood cells, white blood cells, sperm cells, brain cells.
The marrow helps in the production of red blood cells and some types of white blood cells in the skeletal system.
some types of plant cell arecell wallvacuoleschloroplastsxylempackingpalisadespongysome types of animal cells arebrain cellliver cellred blood cellwhite blood cellmacrophage
Blood cells are made in the bone marrow, which is located in the center of bones such as the hip, spine, and ribs. Red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets are produced in the bone marrow. Additionally, during fetal development, blood cells are also made in the liver.
Fibroblasts
There are many types of cells. Blood cells, for example, transport your blood (oxygen and other things as well) through your body, so you stay alive.
White blood cells are also known as leukocytes. Blood is considered connective tissue. Some white blood cells leave the blood and migrate to areas of infection.
Red Marrow
The four main blood types are A, B, AB, and O. Each blood type is determined by the presence or absence of specific antigens on the surface of red blood cells. Additionally, blood types are classified based on the presence of the Rh factor, resulting in positive or negative blood types.
The tissue found in bones that makes blood cells is called bone marrow. There are two types of bone marrow: red marrow, which is responsible for producing red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets, and yellow marrow, which is primarily composed of fat cells. Hematopoiesis, the process of blood cell formation, occurs within the bone marrow through the differentiation of hematopoietic stem cells.
There are seven main types of white blood cell:NeutrophilsEosinophilsBasophilsLymphocytesMonocytesMacrophagesDendritic cellsSome of these are further divded into subtypes, which all have separate tasks in the body. For example, lymphocytes include B-cells, T-cells (which itself has some subsubtypes) and NK-cells. For further detail on and explanations of what each type does, see the related links.
All blood cells originate in the bone marrow. Some of the white blood cells mature in or are stored in other tissues (e.g. thymus gland, spleen) after leaving the bone marrow.