Early origins
Hemopoietic stem cell
- Gives rise to two types of progenitor cells:
- The common myeloid progenitor
- The common lymphoid progenitor
Common myeloid progenitor (CMP, aka, CFU-GEMM) gives rise to the following leukocytes:
- Neutrophil
- Eosinophil
- Basophil
- Monocyte
As we learn elsewhere, the common myeloid progenitor also gives rise to red blood cells and platelets.
Common lymphoid progenitor (CLP)
- Gives rise to lymphocytes.
Histological Details
CMP Lineage:
Neutrophils
- Comprise 60-70% of circulating white blood cells; they are the most common leukocyte.
- Have multi-lobed nuclei.
- As they age, the number of lobes increases: immature band neutrophils have no formed lobes, older neutrophils may have 5 lobes.
- Various types of cytoplasmic granules lend the cytoplasm a pale pink hue.
- Neutrophils phagocytose bacteria by engulfing them with pseudopodia; the bacteria are trapped within a phagosome, where granular digestive enzymes destroy them.
Eosinophils
- Comprise 2-4% of circulating white blood cells.
- Nuclei are multi-lobed.
- Granules stain a bright orange-red color, which helps to differentiate them from neutrophils under the microscope.
- Eosinophilic granules contain parasite-destroying enzymes and polypeptides, including major basic protein.
- Eosinophils also participate in the immune response, and play a role in triggering bronchial asthma.
Basophils
- Comprise 1% of circulating white blood cells.
- Bi-lobed or bean-shaped nucleus that is obscured by an abundance of large metachromatic granules (metachromatic means that the granules stain a different color from that of the dye).
- Basophils participate in hypersensitivity, such as bronchial asthma and dermatological reactions.
- Their granules contain heparin, which prevents blood coagulation, and histamine, which causes inflammation.
Monocytes
- Comprise 5% of circulating white blood cells.
- Their bean-shaped nucleus is visible against light blue/gray staining cytoplasm; lack visible granules.
- In the connective tissues, monocytes become macrophages, and can phagocytose bacteria and other particles (including red blood cells), clean up cellular debris, and present antigens.
- In the bones, they become osteoclasts, which resorb bone tissue as part of growth and remodeling.
CLP Lineage:
Lymphocytes
- Comprise 20-40% of circulating white blood cells.
- Large, round nucleus leaves just a thin rim of cytoplasm.
- Lymphocytes diverge to form B cells, which mature within the bone and participate in humoral immunity, and T cells, which mature in the thymus and participate in cell-mediated immunity.
Granulocytes vs Agranulocytes
Granulocytes:
Neutrophils, eosinophils, and basophils are histologically classified as granulocytes, because of the presence of primary, secondary, and, sometimes, tertiary granules in their cytoplasm.
Agranulocytes:
Monocytes and lymphocytes are called "agranulocytes," because they have only primary granulocytes in their cytoplasm; these can be difficult to see.
Images:
Mark Braun, MD. http://medsci.indiana.edu/c602web/602/c602web/virtual_nrml/nrml_lst_pad.htm