Yes. Pathogens are organisims that have the ability to cause infection/disease.
Examples of pathogens include: bacteria, virus, parasites, fungus, protozoa.
An intracellular pathogen is a pathogen that grows inside a host cell. Examples include viruses, some bacteria like Chlamydia, and certain parasites like Plasmodium.
The major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules are marker molecules on cells that the immune system uses to recognize pathogens. MHC molecules present fragments of pathogens on the cell surface to alert immune cells to the presence of the pathogen. This helps the immune system to target and eliminate infected cells.
molecule - cell - organ
The energy carrying molecule in the cell is adenosine triphosphate. People often call it ATP.
This is called endocytosis.
dendritic cellsWhat_cells_are_present_in_plant_cellsWhat_cells_are_present_in_plant_cells
An intracellular pathogen is a pathogen that grows inside a host cell. Examples include viruses, some bacteria like Chlamydia, and certain parasites like Plasmodium.
the antigens
The major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules are marker molecules on cells that the immune system uses to recognize pathogens. MHC molecules present fragments of pathogens on the cell surface to alert immune cells to the presence of the pathogen. This helps the immune system to target and eliminate infected cells.
molecule - cell - organ
It is called a "killer" T-cell
A virus.
atom, molecule, cell, organiism
c. a pathogen makes more than one antigen. Pathogens typically have multiple epitopes that can be recognized by antibodies, but they do not make more than one antigen. Each pathogen produces specific antigens that can trigger an immune response.
A virus
no
Cell-Mediated Immunity