This is protein called a self-marker. It sort of tells the immune cells that it belongs. If the immune cell doesn't read it right, it will attack and cause an autoimmune problem.
This is a type of protein we call a "self-marker". Our body should recognize it as belonging and not a foreign substance and should not attack it.
Glycoproteins are important in that. They are in cell membrane
Glycoproteins
A carbohydrate is used to help mark cells. This carbohydrate sequence is unique for those cells.
yes
in the endoplasmic reticulum
Because it tells you if you are sick.
Chlorophyll molecule
carbohydrate
antigens
This is protein called a self-marker. It sort of tells the immune cells that it belongs. If the immune cell doesn't read it right, it will attack and cause an autoimmune problem.
there are places on certain nerve cells that recongnize opiates
A carbohydrate is used to help mark cells. This carbohydrate sequence is unique for those cells.
yes
A carbohydrate is used to help mark cells. This carbohydrate sequence is unique for those cells.
Antibody act as markers by coating the outside of a bacteria or infected cell. The antibodies are produced by B cells and the purpose of antibodies is to let white blood cells and killer T cells know what to attack.
Cell identity markers are needed to mark that there are cells in the body and they should be there. This is important for the immune system.
The answer is no. Dry erase markers have scent, which is a highly potent neurotoxin that kills brain cells.
Because it tells you if you are sick.
in the endoplasmic reticulum