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Blood cells

The consists of:

  • blood
  • a pump (the heart) to push the blood around the body
  • a system of tubes to contain the blood (arteries, veins and capillaries)

The blood is the transport medium – it carries substances to all cells in the body and removes waste. It consists of four main components:

  • red blood cells
  • white blood cells
  • platelets
  • plasma

Red blood cells

Red blood cells transport oxygen. They absorb oxygen from the lungs and transport it through narrow blood vessels. The oxygen is released to the cells in the body which use it for .

Red blood cells have adaptations that make them suitable for this:

  • they contain – a red protein that combines with oxygen
  • they have no so they can contain more haemoglobin
  • they are small and flexible so that they can fit through narrow blood vessels
  • they have a biconcave shape (flattened disc shape) to maximise their surface area for oxygen absorption.
Diagram of two red blood cells, one is a plan view from the top, the other a cross section. The Cell membrane, Haemoglobin, and Concave surface are labelled.

White blood cells

White blood cells defend the body against disease. The majority of the white blood cells are a type of cell called phagocytes. The phagocytes ingest and destroy such as .

Diagram of a white blood cell surrounding bacteria. The Nucleus, Cytoplasm and Cell membrane of the white blood cell are labelled.

This is what happens:

  • the phagocyte engulfs the bacterial cell
  • the bacterial cell is broken down by inside the phagocyte

The process of ingesting the pathogen is called .

Phagocytes pass through blood vessel walls into the surrounding tissue