phagocytic$59836$ - translation to ελληνικό
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phagocytic$59836$ - translation to ελληνικό

IMMUNE-CELL TYPE
Phagocytes; Phagocytic cells; Fagocyte; Fagocytes; Phagocytic cell
  • alt=A person's thigh with a red area that is inflamed. At the centre of the inflammation is a wound with pus.
  • alt=One dendritic cell, which is almost the shape of a star. Its edges are ragged.
  • alt=Pus under a microscope, there are many white blood cells with lobed nuclei. Inside some of the cells there are hundreds of bacteria that have been engulfed.
  • alt=Many small cells of leishmania inside a much larger cell
  • A schematic diagram of the presentation of foreign peptides by MHC 1 molecules
  • Monocytes in blood ([[Giemsa stain]])
  • alt=A cartoon showing the relationships between a stem cell and mature white blood cells. Eight different types of white blood cell can derive from the same stem cell.
  • alt= Long rod-shaped bacteria, one of which has been partially engulfed by a larger blob-shaped white blood cell. The shape of the cell is distorted by undigested bacterium inside it.
  • alt=A cartoon depicting a blood vessel and its surrounding tissue cells. There are three similar white blood cells, one in the blood and two among the tissue cells. The ones in the tissue are producing granules that can destroy bacteria.
  • alt=A round cell with a lobed nucleus surrounded by many slightly smaller red blood cells.
  • alt=A cartoon: The macrophage is depicted as a distorted solid circle. On the surface of the circle is a small y-shaped figure that is connected to a solid rectangle that depicts a bacterium.
  • alt=A cartoon that depicts the engulfment of a single bacterium, its passage through a cell where it is digested and released as debris.
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  • alt=A bearded old man holding up a test tube. He is sitting at a table by a window. The table is covered with many small bottles and test tubes.
  • alt=Two round cells with many tiny rod-shaped bacteria inside.
  • alt=Two round bacteria that are close together and are almost completely covered in a string-like substance.

phagocytic      
adj. φαγοκυτταρικός

Ορισμός

Phagocyte
·noun A leucocyte which plays a part in retrogressive processes by taking up (eating), in the form of fine granules, the parts to be removed.

Βικιπαίδεια

Phagocyte

Phagocytes are cells that protect the body by ingesting harmful foreign particles, bacteria, and dead or dying cells. Their name comes from the Greek phagein, "to eat" or "devour", and "-cyte", the suffix in biology denoting "cell", from the Greek kutos, "hollow vessel". They are essential for fighting infections and for subsequent immunity. Phagocytes are important throughout the animal kingdom and are highly developed within vertebrates. One litre of human blood contains about six billion phagocytes. They were discovered in 1882 by Ilya Ilyich Mechnikov while he was studying starfish larvae. Mechnikov was awarded the 1908 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his discovery. Phagocytes occur in many species; some amoebae behave like macrophage phagocytes, which suggests that phagocytes appeared early in the evolution of life.

Phagocytes of humans and other animals are called "professional" or "non-professional" depending on how effective they are at phagocytosis. The professional phagocytes include many types of white blood cells (such as neutrophils, monocytes, macrophages, mast cells, and dendritic cells). The main difference between professional and non-professional phagocytes is that the professional phagocytes have molecules called receptors on their surfaces that can detect harmful objects, such as bacteria, that are not normally found in the body. Phagocytes are crucial in fighting infections, as well as in maintaining healthy tissues by removing dead and dying cells that have reached the end of their lifespan.

During an infection, chemical signals attract phagocytes to places where the pathogen has invaded the body. These chemicals may come from bacteria or from other phagocytes already present. The phagocytes move by a method called chemotaxis. When phagocytes come into contact with bacteria, the receptors on the phagocyte's surface will bind to them. This binding will lead to the engulfing of the bacteria by the phagocyte. Some phagocytes kill the ingested pathogen with oxidants and nitric oxide. After phagocytosis, macrophages and dendritic cells can also participate in antigen presentation, a process in which a phagocyte moves parts of the ingested material back to its surface. This material is then displayed to other cells of the immune system. Some phagocytes then travel to the body's lymph nodes and display the material to white blood cells called lymphocytes. This process is important in building immunity, and many pathogens have evolved methods to evade attacks by phagocytes.