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respond to their as they mature
respond to their as they mature
A yearling needs a higher protein ratio in its food than a mature horse.YEARLING.
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.
When a B cell detects an antigen, it will engulf it and then display it on its cell surface with an MHC molcule. This antigen/MHC combination is then detected by a T cell - which will send signalling molcules to B cells to multiply and mature into plasma cells (which create antibodies against the antigen) and memory B cells (which 'remember' the antigen for next time).They become plasma cells
From two weeks to 3 months, dendant on temperature. The female requires a protein diet to mature her eggs
use energy respond to stimulus grow + mature reproduce homeostasis
RNA is spliced (cut) in order to make it mature. This involves splicing out the introns and leaving the exons - these are the segments that code for a protein. This means that when mRNA leaves the nucleus, it only contains the segments that directly code for a protein.
The likely word is "adult" (grown, mature, not a child).
Both are T and B lymphocytes are produced in bone marrow, but B lymphocytes mature in bone marrow and are part of the humoral response, while T lymphocytes mature in the thymus gland and are part of the cell mediated response.
It will likely be mature but right now it is RP
Mature and affluent