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B cell
(redirected from B cells)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Legal, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.01 sec.

B cell

One of the two types of lymphocytes (the others being T cells). All lymphocytes begin their development in the bone marrow. B cells are involved in so-called humoral immunity; on encountering a foreign substance (antigen), the B lymphocyte differentiates into a plasma cell, which secretes immunoglobulin (see antibody).


B cell [′bē ‚sel]
(immunology)
One of a heterogeneous population of bone-marrow-derived lymphocytes which participates in the immune responses. Also known as B lymphocyte.


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That finding makes sense because earlier work showed that B cells give rise to plasma cells during normal blood development, says Matsui.
In this paper, we demonstrate that Xcyte's Xcellerate Process restores the ability of T cells to interact with the malignant B cells and to eliminate them by inducing programmed cell death, or apoptosis.
That done, the cells then differentiated into both red blood cells and white blood cells called B cells, which play an indispensable role in the immune system.
 
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