they react with different blood types!
Neutrophil, Eosinophil, Basophil, Lymphocyte, Monocyte
Lymphocytes are white blood cells.There are several types of them: natural killer cells (NK), T-cells and B-cells. B cells respond to pathogens by producing large quantities of antibodies which then neutralize foreign objects like bacteria and viruses.Antibodies are proteins made by B-cells.
A healthy adult can produce millions of different types of antibodies, primarily due to the diversity generated by the immune system's B cells through a process called somatic recombination. Each antibody is specific to a unique antigen, allowing the immune system to recognize and respond to a vast array of pathogens. In total, the human body can potentially generate over a billion distinct antibody variants, allowing for a highly adaptable immune response.
Because every cell subject to attack by antibodies has different antigen components on its surface, displaying different " locks " to the antibodies " keys. " This is why a form of selection is used in generating a wide variation in antibody CDR sites.
Plates produce different types of boundaries because they exhibit different axis of movement and towards different direction.
Fruits are different from other types of produce because they develop from the ovary of a flower and contain seeds. This distinguishes them from vegetables and other types of produce that come from different parts of the plant.
That's true. A lymphocyte is one particular type of leukocyte. There are quite a few different types of leukocytes.
An antibody can typically bind to one specific type of antigen.
Many different types of lympocytes exist. Each type recognizes one specific antigen and responds by dividing to form a clone. This clone then secretes a specific antibody agaist the antigen.
These are tumor cells that arose from a single lymphocyte or plasma cell. The kappa light chain is a piece of the structure of an antibody; monoclonal means "single type". Therefore, these are tumor cells that all produce the same antibody structure, which indicates they are all derived from a single tumor cell that originally made this antibody structure.
An antibody is a Glycoprotein, belonging to the immunoglobulin superfamily