B cells make antibodies when they recognize antigens.
B cells produce antibodies.
White blood cells make antibodies called lymphocytes or B cells
Helper T cells recognize the receptor-antigen complex and cause plasma and memory cells to be produced to then produce antibodies.
Genetic recombination is a major factor contributing to cell-mediated immunity. Different B cells and T cells are able to recognize a wide variety of targets because of the genetic recombination they undergo in developmental stages.
The B vitamin that helps to make new cells is called folate. It is also needed for the construction of DNA and is the most needed prenatal vitamin.
The immune system protects the body from free antigens. It does so through the production of antibodies that recognize and neutralize antigens, as well as through the activation of immune cells, such as T cells and natural killer cells, that can directly destroy cells infected with antigens. Additionally, the immune system has memory cells that can recognize and respond more quickly if the same antigen is encountered again in the future.
B-cells produces antibodies that target specific pathogens so t-cells can then recognize it and consume it.
No, cancer cells express self antigens, so your body cannot recognize it as foreign or dangerous.
Memory B cells act like an internal vaccine because once it fights the pathogen off it will recognize it. This is how they make vaccines because they inject you with a small amount of the pathogen not enough to harm you so your memory B cells recognize it.
B lymphocytes are the white blood cells that produce plasma cells that produce antibodies. Antibodies are special proteins that recognize foreign materials and help the body destroy or neutralize them. The type of white blood cell that secretes antibodies to kill microorganisms is called lymphocytes. The other kind of white blood cell is called the phagocyte, which kills pathogens by engulfing them (basically, "eating" the microbe).
No they do not. B cells synthesize the antibodies.
there are 100,000 antibodies on the surface of b-cells which are specific for particular type of antigen therefore if specific antibody recognize the particular type antigen then it attach with it and activated.
no, they are produce by B cells you can remember by thinking B= bodies
immunoglobulins
immunoglobulins
White blood cells make antibodies called lymphocytes or B cells
B cells make antibodies that grab on to the antigens and make them clump together then something eats them.
That is the job of the B-cells, or B Lymphocytes.