Examples of lymph in the following topics:
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- Lymph moves about the body through the lymphatic system, which is made up of vessels, lymph ducts, lymph glands, and organs such as tonsils, adenoids, thymus, and spleen.
- Lymph gathers antigens as it drains from tissues.
- These antigens are filtered through lymph nodes before the lymph is returned to circulation.
- Functionally, the spleen is to the blood as lymph nodes are to the lymph.
- The liquid passes through (b) lymph nodes that filter the lymph that enters the node through afferent vessels, leaving through efferent vessels.
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- Processed antigens displayed on APCs are detected by T cells in the MALT and at various mucosal induction sites, such as the tonsils, adenoids, appendix, or the mesenteric lymph nodes of the intestine.
- Immune tolerance is brought about by specialized APCs in the liver, lymph nodes, small intestine, and lung that present harmless antigens to a diverse population of regulatory T (Treg) cells: specialized lymphocytes that suppress local inflammation and inhibit the secretion of stimulatory immune factors.
- Other antigen-loaded dendritic cells migrate through the lymphatic system where they activate B cells, T cells, and plasma cells in the lymph nodes.
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- Once they are immunocompetent, the T and B cells migrate to the spleen and lymph nodes where they remain until they are called on during an infection.
- B cells are involved in the humoral immune response, which targets pathogens loose in blood and lymph, while T cells are involved in the cell-mediated immune response, which targets infected cells.
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- Myc is a transcription factor that is aberrantly activated in Burkett's Lymphoma, a cancer of the lymph system.
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- When a pathogen enters the body, cells in the blood and lymph detect the specific pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) on the pathogen's surface.
- A monocyte, a type of leukocyte (white blood cell) that circulates in the blood and lymph, differentiates into macrophages after it moves into infected tissue .
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- Adult bone marrow has three distinct types of stem cells: hematopoietic stem cells, which give rise to red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets ; endothelial stem cells, which give rise to the endothelial cell types that line blood and lymph vessels; and mesenchymal stem cells, which give rise to the different types of muscle cells.
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- Once B cells mature in the bone marrow, they migrate to lymph nodes or other lymphatic organs, where they may begin to encounter pathogens.
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- Additional proteins in the blood plasma and lymph carry nutrients and metabolic waste products throughout the body.
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- Symptoms include swollen lymph nodes, fever, seizure, vomiting of blood, and (c) gangrene.