Lymphoid Flashcards
Thymus
Thymus does not have B cells!! (except isolated in vessels)
Cortex - developing T with supportive cells
- ERC = epithelial reticular cells - form barrier with desmosomes - must recognize self (positive selection)
Medulla - Hassall’s corpuscles (not significant, old ERCs)
- must not react against self cells (negative selection)
- lower density
Involutes with age - can look like nodules, but really is still connected and has cortex and medulla
Primary vs secondary
Maturity during dev’t vs where they reside now
Bone marrow, thymus vs nodes, spleen, MALT (unencapsulated)
Maturity of T lymphocytes
In thymus
Must be able to recognize self MHC1 (multihistocompatibility complex = universal) = first test (cortex)
Must not have any response to self = second test (medulla)
Released T lymphocytes can then form colonies, educate progeny
Lymph nodes
Follicles dense peripherally - B cells and some antigen presenting
- activated if B cells in core are cytoplasmic, active -> plasma “clearing/germinal center”
Cortex surrounds follicles, paracortex/deep/parafollicular - T cells - surveillance and reproducing
- High endothelial venules - pumps T-lymphocytes into paracortex - looks cuboidal
Medulla - cords and lymphoid sinuses in between follicles -> efferent lymph vessel
Vascular system
Surrounded by capsule and subcapsular sinus (receives trunks)
Antigen presenting cells
MEC2 on it’s surface -
Scattered throughout body - ex Langerhans, Kuffper, macrophage
-> migrate through lymph system
Spleen
Should be 8 cm, below 8th rib
Capsule, reticular fibers (soft), trabeculae (larger vessels)
White pulp = lymphocytes - B cells -> balls (germinal centers), periarteriolar lymphatic sheets around arterioles = T cells
- filters blood, blood-borne pathogens (vs lymph)
Red pulp = large venous sinusoids, large cytoplasmic endothelial cells
- filters RBCs - based on flexibility of membranes (stiff = old)
Blood flow through spleen
Open circulation!
Trabecular artery -> central artery (with PALS) -> marginal zone -> open into parenchyma!
-> RBCs return to venous sinus - discontinuous basement membrane, Stave cells with openings that filter for RBC flexibility
MALT
Unencapsulated Within lamina propria of GI Many little blue cells = lymphoid! - any germinal center = activated B cells Many make IgA for secretion GALT = gut-associated - "Peyer's patch" - nodule within GI (usu ilium) - M cells - antigen presenting cells Also includes tonsils
Tonsils
Usually lots of germinal centers/”nodules”
Epithelium is determined by surface (strat squam, respiratory)
Pharyngeal/adenoids - back of pharynx, resp epithelium (ciliated columnar), no crypts
Palatine - lateral, strat squam, long + branched crypts
Lingual - base of tongue, strat squam, long unbranched crypts