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Stem
Cells Red
Blood Cells White
Blood Cells
Platelets
Plasma
Blood
Types & Activity
Bloodology
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| White Blood Cells, Platelets (stained purple),
a T-Lymphocyte white cell (stained green), and a Monocyte white
cell (stained gold) as seen through a scanning electron microscope.
©2000 Dennis Kunkel, Ph.D. |
The scientific name for white blood cells is Leukocytes. Because
white blood cells are hard to see when scientists look for them
under a microscope, they are usually stained with a bright colored
dye. Just like red blood cells, white cells are formed in the bone
marrow and are created by a parent cell called a stem cell.
There are many different kinds of white blood cells and each one has
a very specific job to do. There are lymphocyte T cells and lymphocyte
B cells, monocytes, and granulocytes.
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Granulocytes contain little
granules in their cytoplasm, or cell matter. Granulocytes can
be identified even further as neutrophils, basophils and eosinophils.
Granulocytes recognize signals that enemy germs send out when
they invade the body. |
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My favorite
blood cell is the one that fights the germs and then eats them!
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—
Luke,
elementary school student |
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