English, asked by Anonymous, 6 months ago

what are the function of eosinophil? ​

Answers

Answered by richagrowel
1

Answer:

Eosinophilic functions include: movement to inflamed areas, trapping substances, killing cells, anti-parasitic and bactericidal activity, participating in immediate allergic reactions, and modulating inflammatory responses

Answered by brainly7817
2

Answer:

Eosinophils are specialized immune cells

Eosinophils are specialized immune cellsThe eosinophil is a specialized cell of the immune system. This proinflammatory white blood cell generally has a nucleus with two lobes (bilobed) and cytoplasm filled with approximately 200 large granules containing enzymes and proteins with different (known and unknown) functions.

Eosinophils are specialized immune cellsThe eosinophil is a specialized cell of the immune system. This proinflammatory white blood cell generally has a nucleus with two lobes (bilobed) and cytoplasm filled with approximately 200 large granules containing enzymes and proteins with different (known and unknown) functions.Eosinophils & neutrophils in white blood cells High-magnification hematoxylin & eosin staining of blood eosinophils.

Eosinophils are specialized immune cellsThe eosinophil is a specialized cell of the immune system. This proinflammatory white blood cell generally has a nucleus with two lobes (bilobed) and cytoplasm filled with approximately 200 large granules containing enzymes and proteins with different (known and unknown) functions.Eosinophils & neutrophils in white blood cells High-magnification hematoxylin & eosin staining of blood eosinophils.The white blood cells shown above are stained with hematoxylin and eosin (H&E). H&E staining is a common method used in histology. The hematoxylin stains the nuclei of cells (purple), the control center of the cell where the DNA is located. The eosin stains proteins (pink). The white blood cells shown here (left panel) are eosinophils (nucleus with 2 lobes) and neutrophils (nucleus with 2-5 lobes). The intense pink staining in the eosinophils is the reason why these cells were named "eosinophils", meaning "eosin loving".

Eosinophils are specialized immune cellsThe eosinophil is a specialized cell of the immune system. This proinflammatory white blood cell generally has a nucleus with two lobes (bilobed) and cytoplasm filled with approximately 200 large granules containing enzymes and proteins with different (known and unknown) functions.Eosinophils & neutrophils in white blood cells High-magnification hematoxylin & eosin staining of blood eosinophils.The white blood cells shown above are stained with hematoxylin and eosin (H&E). H&E staining is a common method used in histology. The hematoxylin stains the nuclei of cells (purple), the control center of the cell where the DNA is located. The eosin stains proteins (pink). The white blood cells shown here (left panel) are eosinophils (nucleus with 2 lobes) and neutrophils (nucleus with 2-5 lobes). The intense pink staining in the eosinophils is the reason why these cells were named "eosinophils", meaning "eosin loving". In the high-magnification H&E staining of blood eosinophils above (right panel), the bright pink marks the mediator- and protein-stuffed granules that break open when the eosinophil is activated. The granule contents are toxic to both invaders and a person's own cells and tissues.

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