06 Histo M6 - Blood and Hemopoiesis
06 Histo M6 - Blood and Hemopoiesis
06 Histo M6 - Blood and Hemopoiesis
TYPES
Have marginal band of microtubulesin peripheral
cytoplasm, associated with abundant contractile proteins actin
METHODS USED TO STUDY and myosin that forms a contractile system
Reduced platelet numbers - thrombocytopenia(< 20 x109 /L - Monocytes - large eccentrically located nucleus, stains less
associated with spontaneous small vessel bleeding or intensely, with more open chromatin
petechiae, usually in skin and bowel wall) - Nuclear shape is variable, often with deep indentation
life-threatening situation in nucleus near to the center of cell (horseshoe
Genetic disorders: Von Willebrand disease- defect in shape)
von willebrand factor - Two or more nucleoli may be visible
(FVII-VWF) - complex adhesion molecule in - Cytoplasm abundant and stains pale greyish-blue with
endothelium and megakaryocytes romanowsky methods
Drugs affecting platelet function: aspirin (acetylsalicylic acid) - Numerous small purple stained lysosomal granules
blocks enzyme clyclooxygenase, inhibiting thromboxane and cytoplasmic vacuoles - confer frosted glass
production and impairs platelet function appearance
Monocyte function:
1. Circulatein blood
2. Respond to chemotaxic signalsfrom damaged
tissue, microorganism inflammationby migration into
tissues
3. Differentiation into macrophages
4. Capacity for phagocytosisand content of hydrolytic a) Inactive lymphocyte (Lc) and lymphoblast
enzymes - can engulf and destroy tissue debris and b) large granular lymphocyte
foreign material - Lymphocytes circulate between lymphoid tissues and other
5. Survive and prolif in tissue as macrophageif they are tissues of body via blood and lymphatic vessels
stimulated by growth factor - Macrophage Colony - Transit into tissues as part of immune surveillance
Stimulating Factor (M-CSF), granulocyte-macrophage - Variable lifespan - weeks to indefinite lifespan
colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF) or IL-3but do not - Unlike granulocytes, are not end cells - can proliferate.
re-enter circulation Proliferation occurs in tissues
- Have receptors for chemokines and cytokines - Lymphopoiesis constant and relatively inconspicuous in bone
including interferon gamma (IFN-γ) - cytokine marrow
produced by T lymphocytes. - 20-40% of circulating leucocytes, 1.0 - 4.5 x 109 /L
- Can process antigen and present antigen to T cells to - Inactive form:Smallest of white cells, only slightly larger
promote adaptive immune response. than red blood cell
- Can secrete chemokines cytokines and growth Round or oval stained nucleus with clumped
factorsinvolved in inflammation, immunity, tissue chromatin
healing and repair Relatively small amount of pale basophilic
non-granular cytoplasm
- Large granular lymphocytes (LGL) - Proportion of normal
LYMPHOCYTES lymphoid cells are larger than bigger nuclei, more cytoplasm,
small number of cytoplasmic granules
- Represent natural killer T or cytotoxic T lymphocytes
- Central role in immunologic defense mechanism - State of nucleus and amount of cytoplasm depends upon
- Produced from hemopoietic stem cells in bone activity of cell
marrow - Activated form/proliferating:increase in size with larger
● Lymphoblast - earlier form, larger than lymphocyte nuclei, open chromatin, visible large nucleoli, more cytoplasm
- With fine, open nuclear chromatin, few pale - Circulate in blood during inflammatory
inconspicuous nucleoli, scant cytoplasm Process
- Some mature in bone marrow as B cells - Active B cells settle in tissues, mature into
(bone marrow), others into T cells long-lived antibody-secreting plasma cells
(thymus), others into natural KIller T Cells (bone
marrow)
Disorders of lymphocytes: