B cells stand for Bursa of Fabricus and T cells stand for T-lyphocytes.
t cells are killer cells
b cells are antibodies
T-cells will do this
T- and B-cells are highly specialised defender cells - different groups of cells are tailored to different germs. When your body is infected with a particular germ, only the T- and B-cells that recognise it will respond. These selected cells then quickly multiply, creating an army of identical cells to fight the infection. Special types of T- and B-cells 'remember' the invader, making you immune to a second attack.
Lymphocytes
The T in T-cells stands for the thymus gland. Lymphocytes produced in the bone marrow are either become B-cells or they are matured in the thymus gland and are "trained" to be either Natural Killer T-cells, CD4 (Helper T-cells), CD8 (Suppressor T-cells).
exposure to a specific antigen at a specific site in a plasma membrane.
t cells are killer cells b cells are antibodies
its the t and the b
B-cells and T-cells are both produced in the bone marrow. B-cells stay in the bone marrow but T-cells migrate to the thymus
Approximately 67% T cells and 33% B cells.
T and B cells are two types of lymphatic cells.
T and B cells are two types of lymphatic cells.
Regulatory T-cells
plasma cells
T-cells will do this
T-cells B-cells NK cells (natural killer)
T cells's primary task is to activate B cells and killer T cells. The B cells searchfor antigens matching its receptors. If it finds such antigen it connects to it, and inside the B cell a triggering signal is set off.
Yes, and B cells.