. . "Coelomocyt je fagocytn\u00ED leukocyt, kter\u00FD maj\u00ED \u017Eivo\u010Dichov\u00E9, kter\u00E1 maj\u00ED coelom. Napad\u00E1 bakterie a viry, pomoc\u00ED zapouzd\u0159en\u00ED nebo faocyt\u00F3zy. N\u011Bkdy je coelomocyt p\u0159ipevn\u011Bn\u00FD ke st\u011Bn\u011B t\u011Bla nebo se voln\u011B pohybovat uvnit\u0159 c\u00E9vy. U h\u00E1\u010F\u00E1tka obecn\u00E9ho nejsp\u00ED\u0161e coelomocyt nen\u00ED z\u0159ejm\u011B schopen fagocyt\u00F3zy."@cs . . . . . . . . "Coelomocyt je fagocytn\u00ED leukocyt, kter\u00FD maj\u00ED \u017Eivo\u010Dichov\u00E9, kter\u00E1 maj\u00ED coelom. Napad\u00E1 bakterie a viry, pomoc\u00ED zapouzd\u0159en\u00ED nebo faocyt\u00F3zy. N\u011Bkdy je coelomocyt p\u0159ipevn\u011Bn\u00FD ke st\u011Bn\u011B t\u011Bla nebo se voln\u011B pohybovat uvnit\u0159 c\u00E9vy. U h\u00E1\u010F\u00E1tka obecn\u00E9ho nejsp\u00ED\u0161e coelomocyt nen\u00ED z\u0159ejm\u011B schopen fagocyt\u00F3zy."@cs . . . "Coelomocyt"@cs . "989896964"^^ . . . . . . "A coelomocyte (/\u02C8si\u02D0l\u0259mo\u028A\u02CCsa\u026At/) is a phagocytic leukocyte that appears in the bodies of animals that have a coelom. In most, it attacks and digests invading organisms such as bacteria and viruses through encapsulation and phagocytosis, though in some animals (e.g., the nematode worm Caenorhabditis elegans) it does not seem capable of the phagocytosis. A coelomocyte may either be fixed to the body wall or may be free-floating within the coelom. The word comes from the Ancient Greek ko\u00EDl\u014Dma, \"cavity\" or \"hollow\", and k\u00FDtos, \"receptacle\" or \"container\"."@en . . "Coelomocyte"@en . . . "40422815"^^ . "1363"^^ . . . . . . . . . . "A coelomocyte (/\u02C8si\u02D0l\u0259mo\u028A\u02CCsa\u026At/) is a phagocytic leukocyte that appears in the bodies of animals that have a coelom. In most, it attacks and digests invading organisms such as bacteria and viruses through encapsulation and phagocytosis, though in some animals (e.g., the nematode worm Caenorhabditis elegans) it does not seem capable of the phagocytosis. A coelomocyte may either be fixed to the body wall or may be free-floating within the coelom. The word comes from the Ancient Greek ko\u00EDl\u014Dma, \"cavity\" or \"hollow\", and k\u00FDtos, \"receptacle\" or \"container\"."@en . . . .