Macrophages
White blood cells, particularly phagocytes such as macrophages and neutrophils, patrol the interstitial fluid to detect and consume bacteria and virus-infected cells. These cells play a critical role in the immune response by identifying and eliminating pathogens to maintain overall health and prevent infections.
Simple the answer is an Antibody!
Changes in color and smell.
an opsonized bacteria is a foreign pathogen in the human body in which a floating antigen is attached to the epitope (protein on the bacteria) so that a phagocyte can easily recognize the bacteria and engulf and destroy it.
People come across all sorts of bacteria in a day, but is all bactiera bad for you? as my sister calls it "goodatcteria" well im can't name all the bateria we would be here all day. so here it goes..... theres idk and idk and idk :p
White blood cells, particularly phagocytes such as macrophages and neutrophils, patrol the interstitial fluid to detect and consume bacteria and virus-infected cells. These cells play a critical role in the immune response by identifying and eliminating pathogens to maintain overall health and prevent infections.
The immune system does not recognize the killed bacteria, and cannot recognize that the bacteria are killed, so it begins to produce antibodies for it just as it would if the bacteria were alive.
germs
Simple the answer is an Antibody!
When antibodies bind to the epitopes of an antigen(bacteria) via antigen receptors, the antibodies present the bacteria to a macrophages in a form that they recognize the foreign substance and engulf them. This antibody-antigen "team work" is also known as opsonization
Changes in color and smell.
Vaccines are great for this. Some vaccines distribute inactive bacteria into your body so that your white blood cells can learn to recognize them. This prevents you from getting whatever disease the bacteria cause. Sometimes, however, it is not safe to introduce bacteria to the body like that. In situations like that, I think it would be best to take antibiotics.
Vaccines are great for this. Some vaccines distribute inactive bacteria into your body so that your white blood cells can learn to recognize them. This prevents you from getting whatever disease the bacteria cause. Sometimes, however, it is not safe to introduce bacteria to the body like that. In situations like that, I think it would be best to take antibiotics.
I'm not sure what you mean by body defenders but T-cells are the ones that recognize the enemy. The white cells get that and they kill the virus, bacteria, etc.
Use selective media agar plates. Different types of agar will let bacteria grow and inhibit fungal growth, or vice versa.
Antibiotics or vaccines. I think...
MHC doesn't "recognize" bacteria or anything. It's job is simply take up the broken peptides. These peptides can be originally from a virus, bacteria, or from the cell itself (self). It will take these antigen that it can bind to and bring it to the cells surface. Your adaptive immunity cells (B and T cells) job is to "see" what the MHC has to offer and identify it as self (leave alone) or as foreign (need to destroy).