Answer:
When seen on a Wright-stained peripheral blood film, a young red cell that has just extruded (lost its) nucleus is referred to as a polychromatophilic cell.
Explanation:
On Wright-stained smears, slightly immature red cells that do not have nuclei (reticulocyte stage) look blue-gray because they still have some ribonucleic acid in them (RNA). These cells are commonly referred to as polychromatophilic cells. Most of the time, polychromatophilic cells are bigger than mature red cells, and their blue-gray color makes them different from macrocytes. Polychromatophilic red cells also tend to lack the central pallor.
When the remaining mRNA and ribosomes are stained with supravital dyes, they make the red cells look like a "reticular" mesh network. This is how the name "reticulocyte" came about. It is to be noted that not all reticulocytes show up as polychromatophils when stained with Wright-Giemsa.
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Blood<span> is a heterogeneous </span>mixture<span> because the </span>blood<span> cells are physically separate from the </span>blood<span> plasma. The cells have different properties than the plasma. The cells can be separated from the plasma by centrifuging, which is a physical change. Since it can be separated mechanically, it is not a chemical compound</span>
Answer:
monomers
Explanation:
The monomers combine with each other using covalent bonds to form larger molecules known as polymers. In doing so, monomers release water molecules as byproducts.
The RNA (ribonucleic acid) and the associated proteins forms the ribosomes. These ribosomes are the site of protein synthesis in a cell. Inside the stained cell nucleus, the nucleolus part of the cell can be seen. The nucleolus is the part where the all the ribosomes of the cell are assembled.
Hence, the answer is 'nucleolus'.