Macrophages ( a type of white cell) do take in foreign bodies by phagocytosis. Others use a type of chemical warfare. Others "call for the troops".
The cell engulfs a substance by forming a vesicle around the substance and then pokes a hole in it in a process called pinocytosis if the substance is mostly water or by phagocytosis if the substance is a solid or finally by a process called receptor-mediated endocytosis which requires the substance to bind to a membrane-bound receptor. This process inactivates the foreign body or bacteria.
The cells capable of fighting bacterial infection in the body are white blood cells, specifically neutrophils and macrophages. These cells work together to engulf and destroy bacteria using mechanisms such as phagocytosis and releasing antimicrobial substances.
White blood cells that engulf and destroy bacteria are known as neutrophils. They are a type of phagocyte that play a key role in the immune response against bacterial infections. Neutrophils engulf bacteria through a process known as phagocytosis, helping to eliminate the invading pathogens from the body.
White blood cells dispose of worn-out red blood cells through phagocytosis. They engulf and digest the old red blood cells to remove them from circulation efficiently.
by phagocytosis,they engulf bacteria
Phagocytosis is the medical term meaning digestion and ingestion of microorganisms by white blood cells.
Phagocytosis :)
No. Phagocytosis is the process in which a cell engulfs and takes in a particle. Some white blood cells are phagocytes, taking in and destroying bacteria.
White blood cells are the body's infection-fighting cells. Therefore, they fight against any infection that may affect the heart such as bacterial endocarditis. They attach to the disease and kill them off by either "eating them" (phagocytosis) or by other means.
they "engulf" the bacteria
The combat of disease through phagocytosis (the engulfing of the bacterial cells through changing of the shape of the membrane) which encloses the bacteria within the white blood cell, where there are lysosomes containing enzymes which break down the bacteria.
phagocytosis
Endocytosis & phagocytosis