Immune cells called macrophages will eat dead cells and cell debris.
Cell division allows for growth, as cells divide to produce new cells. Worn out or damaged cells are typically removed through programmed cell death, also known as apoptosis, which helps maintain the health and proper functioning of tissues and organs.
The large cell that engulfs foreign material and worn out red cells is called a macrophage. Macrophages are a type of white blood cell that play a key role in the immune system by engulfing and digesting pathogens, cell debris, and other harmful substances.
The functions of cell division by mitosis are 1. to keep the total cell number in a mature organism relatively constant, 2. to replace worn-out or damaged cells, and 3. to enable a multicellular organism to grow to adult size.
It all depends on which cells. Some are not replaced. These are mostly nerve cells such as found in the brain. Other cells constantly die and are shed and replaced from tissues below them. An example of this are your skin cells.
Phagocytosis is the process where a white blood cell surrounds, engulfs, and forms a vesicle around a worn-out red blood cell for elimination. This is a key mechanism by which the immune system clears out old or damaged cells from the body.
Lysosomes and peroxisomes - These organelles are the recycling center of the cell. They digest foreign bacteria that invade the cell, rid the cell of toxic substances, and recycle worn-out cell components.
Cell division allows for growth, as cells divide to produce new cells. Worn out or damaged cells are typically removed through programmed cell death, also known as apoptosis, which helps maintain the health and proper functioning of tissues and organs.
Lysosomes and peroxisomes - These organelles are the recycling center of the cell. They digest foreign bacteria that invade the cell, rid the cell of toxic substances, and recycle worn-out cell components.
White blood cells dispose of worn-out red blood cells through phagocytosis. They engulf and digest the old red blood cells to remove them from circulation efficiently.
Lysosomes, which contain hydrolytic enzymes, are the organelles responsible for breaking down food, waste, and worn out cell parts in the cells.
not the replace and growth of worn and or dead cells
spleen?
It's not a lymph it's a specialised cell called nurse cells which not only create Red blood cells but after 20-30 days when that red blood cell is worn out another nurse cell recycles it.
Apoptosis is the process by which the body eliminates worn-out or damaged cells. It is a programmed cell death mechanism that helps maintain tissue homeostasis and eliminate cells that are no longer functioning properly.
Worn out cells need to be replaced to keep your body functioning.
Lysosomes are called scavengers of the cells because they remove cell debris consisting of dead and worn out cell organelle by digesting the same. Rather they nourish the cells by sending out digesting nutrients into the cytoplasm.
The large cell that engulfs foreign material and worn out red cells is called a macrophage. Macrophages are a type of white blood cell that play a key role in the immune system by engulfing and digesting pathogens, cell debris, and other harmful substances.