Abstract
The spleens of Lewis rats, both normal and infected with Trypanosoma lewisi were examined by electron microscopy. Special attention was directed to clusters of splenic cells which occur in the course of the infection. The reticular cells first showed alterations of their structure by the second day of infection, with considerable surface membrane activity. By the fourth day and thereafter various cells were found gathered around the reticular cells. These cell clusters mainly contained lymphocytes, plasma cells, and erythropoietic elements in many stages of differentiation. It was not unusual that several cell types were found adjacent to the same central reticular cell. These arrays, similar in geometry to the erythropoietic island of the bone marrow, became more predominantly "plasma cell" islands as the infection progressed. Parasites were recognizable within the reticular cells, and were noted to be in regions where the cellular membranes of adjacent cells demonstrated vesiculations resembling rhopheocytosis. A further observation was the pinching off of neighboring plasma cell cytoplasm into the reticular cells.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 197-210 |
Number of pages | 14 |
Journal | Experimental Parasitology |
Volume | 34 |
Issue number | 2 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Oct 1973 |
Keywords
- Blast cell
- Electron microscopy
- Erythroblast
- Erythrophagocytosis
- Erythropoietic island
- Immune cell clusters
- Immune spleen cells
- Lymphomyeloid complex
- Plasma cell
- Reticular cell
- Rhopheocytotic vesicles
- Trypanosoma lewisi