They engulf them (eat them)
They attack the germs in our bodies, going out to where the germs are, and they just eat them. And the germs are now gone. That's how the germs are killed in the human body.
------James E. Andrews
-Harvard University Physics Professor-
yes
White blood cells tend to gobble up germs. White blood cells flock to areas of irritation and infection in order to fight them off.
The spleen identifies "old" erythrocytes (RBCs) and destroys them. The life of an RBC is around 120 days.
through cells in the villi of the small intestine
After bursting from red blood cells, spores released by Plasmodium (malaria parasite) enter other red blood cells to continue the infection cycle. They invade new cells, replicate, and eventually burst out to infect more cells, causing the cycle of infection to continue.
White blood cells
white blood cells treat the vaccine as an intruder and make antibodies to fight it.
Blood contains red blood cells. Red blood cells don't contain blood. Blood does not enter the red blood cell.
Whie Blood cells. they attack the bacteria and germs that enter your body.They are large cells that either produce anti-bodies or engulf microbes, but both result in the destruction of microbes.
if bacteria enter a wound and are not ingested by the white cells of the blood or lymph,they will be carried in the lymph to a lymph node and white cells there will ingest them
The cells are alive and metabolically active.
Yes
their color
The new cells enter into interphase.
yes
white blood cells
Raw materials and harmful wastes enter and exit the cells in your body by blood, the red blood carry oxygen from lungs to the body cells.