HEMATOPOIESIS AND ERYTHROPOIESIS Chapters 3 and 4
Red bone marrow is composed of
"cord" of tissue where the blood cells are produced
Produced by many different cells Stimulate specific cell growth
Colony stimulating factors (CSFs)
Supravital stain
A stain used to stain cells while they are still living
if stained with Wright stain it's called Wright stain is the standard stain used in hematology
polychromasia
Erythropoiesis
process of erythrocyte production
Hematopoiesis
production and development of blood cells
Maturing Cells
takes about 7-10 days live for about 120 days in the peripheral blood stream
Normoblastic Rubriblastic Erythroblastic
3 Nomenclatures for Erythropoiesis
Nucleus: Round to oval Nucleoli no longer visible Chromatin more clumped Cytoplasm: Deeply basophilic No Granules
Basophilic Normoblast (prorubricyte)
In adults (almost all) blood cell development occurs in
Bone Marrow
The determining factor controlling the rate of production is physiologic need Stem cell regulators stem cells divide when stimulated by certain
Cytokines
Cytokines
Cytokines are diverse group of glycoproteins that regulate functional activities of cells Sometimes called "growth factors" Responsible for stimulation or inhibition of production, differentiation, or trafficking of blood cells Produced by many types of cells (incl. WBC) Can prevent apoptosis
Quiescence of HSC and early progenitors
TGF-β
Suppresses colony growth
TNF-α
Nurse cells surrounded by concnentric circles of maturing erythrocytes. Aids in the ejection of the nucleus Phagocytizes defective cells
Erythroblastic Islands
Stimulates proliferation and differentiation of erythrocytes Stimulates BFU-E to develop into CFU-E Produced primarily by specialized cells in the kidney Responds to hypoxia (lack of oxygen) to maintain adequate levels of erythrocytes to carry hemoglobin (oxygen)
Erythropoietin
Structural support (collagen) Adhesion (integrins and VCAM)
Extracellular Matrix
Erythropoiesis
Formation and maturation of erythrocytes
These cell give rise to all bone marrow cells (erythrocytes, leukocytes, platelets) Capable of self-renewal and differentiation into progenitor cells (asymmetric cell division) Not morphologically distinguishable
Hematopoietic STEM cell
Starts at about week 5 The liver becomes the primary site of hematopoiesis by third month. Spleen is a minor site during this phase Continues to produce cells until birth
Hepatic phase
Induce cell death
Interferons
Varying source and target sites Promote differentiation of WBCs
Interleukins
Activation is essential in early stages of hematopoiesis Stimulates stem cell and progenitor production
Kit ligand (aka stem cell factor)
Main function is not related to hematopoiesis but plays a role in the destruction of erythrocytes Backs up the spleen
Liver
Lymphoid tissue - lymphocytes activation and proliferation
Lymph Nodes
Nucleus: None Cytoplasm: Salmon pink color Pale area in the center called the central pallor
Mature Erythrocyte
95% of bone marrow cells Are morphologically distinguishable
Maturing cells
From birth until 5-7 years old hematopoiesis occurs in the red bone marrow of ALL bones After this point fat or yellow marrow begins to replace the red marrow of long and short bone By the time we are adult the only site of hematopoiesis is flat and irregular bones
Medullary Phase
Before birth, embryonic Starts as early as day 19 of fertilization Hematopoiesis is occurring in the yolk sac of the embryo And in tissues near the embryonic aorta (aorta-gonad-mesenphros)
Mesoblastic phase
Colonies of differentiated cells remain fairly segregated
Niches
N:C ratio
Nuclear to cytoplasm ratio, the ration of the volume of the cell nucleus to the volume of the cells cytoplasm
Nucleus: May be central or eccentric Chromatin tightly condensed Cytoplasm: Reddish pink
Orthochromic Normoblast (metarubricyte)
Nucleus: No nucleus Cytoplasm: Residual mitochochondria and RNA Overall blue appearance
Reticulocyte
Nucleus: Smaller Chromatin is clumped and dense Cytoplasm: Some pink coloration giving the cell a blue-gray or light gray appearance Last stage capable of mitosis
Polychromatic Normoblast (rubricyte)
Have potential to be any hematopoietic cell 3% of bone marrow cells Not morphologically distinguishable
Progenitor cells
Nucleus: Round to oval 1 to 2 nucleoli Fine chromatin Cytoplasm: Deeply basophilic No granules
Pronormoblast (Rubriblast)
Largest lymphoid organ in the body Plays the role of "dumping site" for old and defected erythrocytes Storage site for thrombocytes (platelets) Vital but not essential for life
Spleen
Macrophages in the bone marrow
Stem cell inhibitor (SCI)
Homing receptors Secrete growth and differentiation factors
Stromal Cells
Inclusions
Structures formed within a cell not normally found
Cellular regulation
T cells and NK cells
Mesoblastic Hepatic Medullary or myeloid
Three phases of hematopoiesis
Controls production and release of platelets Liver is main site of production
Thrombopoietin (TPO)
Lymphoid tissue - produces T-lymphocytes
Thymus
Blood cells move...
between reticular cells and through endothelial cells in the sinus wall
Erythrocyte
red blood cell
contains mainly red blood cells and macrophages function to phagocytize old red blood cells
red pulp
if stained with supravital stain (stains living cells) it's called
reticulocyte
circular in structure and is made up mainly of lymphocytes functions in a manner similar to the nodules of the lymph node
white pulp