Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Haemopoiesis
- What is it?
- Refers to the production
of all the cells of the blood
- Can be further split into
- Erythropoiesis (RBCs)
- Leukopoiesis (WBCs)
- Thrombopoiesis (thrombocytes, aka platelets)
- Begins during the 20th week
of life in the foetal liver and
spleen - this role is then taken
over by the bone marrow in the
young on into adulthood
- The bone
marrow
- i.e. the site of haemopoiesis
(in adults) - restricted to the
proximal regions of long bones
and the support skeleton
- Develops in the embryo - from hollowing out
of the long bones (forming a central cavity)
- In the cavity a primitive, undifferntiated cell
(haemocytoblast), or stem cell develops
- All other blood cells are derived from this precursor (multipotent stem cell)
- Totipotent (omnipotent) = embryonic blastocyst
cells that can form ALL cells of the body and cells
of the placental (not body) required for viability
- Pluripotent = can form ALL cells of the body only
- Multipotent = limited to produce ALL cells
of a particular lineage (e.g. blood cells)
- A combination
of two tissues
- The highly vascular red marrow (50%) is the site of blood cell production
- The fatty yellow marrow (50%) - no blood production function
- The 50:50 ratio can change and is measured as the level of marrow activity (marrow cellularity)
- Blood cell development in the marrow
- Immature cells are the largest and posses nucleoli (artefacts seen
within the nucleus - mainly RNA in structure and are involved in mitosis)
- In granulated cells (WBCs -
neutrophils, basophils, eosinophils) the
granules are acquired later in maturation
- Erythrocyte nuclei are lost later in development
- Developing cells are retained within the marrow until
they are developed sufficiently and functionally capable
- They are then released into the circulating
bloodfor the remainder of their lifespan
- Mechanism of haemopoiesis
- Stem
cells
- All blood cells are produced by the bone marrow
- They all come from a multipotent stem
cell (haematopoietic stem cell, HSC)
- Give rise to...
- Myeloid cell lineage
(RBCs, thrombocytes,
granulocytes)
- Lymphoid cell lineage
(lymphocytes - B and T)
- Self renewal / commitment into a
commited cell lineage progenitor
- Commitment -> progenitor cell 1
(e.g. common lyphoid progenitor)
- Colony forming unit (CFU)
- Division and differentiation
- Morphologically distinct
intermediate blast cell
- Maturation
- Mature blood
cell type B
- Morphologically distinct
intermediate blast cell
- Maturation
- Mature blood
cell type A
- Renewed HSC
(stem cell renewal)
- ->
- Commitment -> progenitor cell 2
(e.g. comon myeloid progenitor)
- Production of
lineage blood cells
- The bone marrow and spleen form a
supportive environment (called the
haemopoietic microenvironment)
- Pluripotent stem cell
(from developing
blastocyst)
- Multipotent stem cell
(HSC in bone marrow)
- Diameter 18-23um (large)
- Give rise to myeloid and
lymphoid progenitors
- (Common) Myeloid progenitor
- RBCs, granulocytes (PMNs,
eosinophils, basophils) and
thrombocytes
- (Common) lymphoid progenitor
- Lymphocytes only
- Progenitor cells
- = irreversibly commited stem
cell (cannot self-renew)
- Regulated by certain hormones or substances so
that they can proliferate and undergo maturation
- Growth factors
(GFs)
- Haemopoiesis occurs in a
suitable microenvironment
provided by a stromal matrix on
which stem cells grow and divide
- There are probably
specific recognition and
adhesion sites sites
- Extracellular glycoproteins
and other compounds are
involved in the binding
- Microenvironment (adhesion
and growth factors) provided
by local macrophages, ECM,
adipocytes, fibroblasts etc.
- E.g. granulocyte colony
stimulating factor (G-CSF) -
in the development and
maturation of neutrophils
(from myeloid progenitor)
- Stimulates proliferation of
early bone marrow cells
- Causes direct differentiation
to one or other cell type
- Stimulates cell maturation (in
neutrophil single nucleus beomces
lobed; normal = 3-5 lobes)
- Supress apoptosis or affect the
function of mature non-dividing cells
- Binds to cells expressing
the correct receptor
- Signalling via ...
- JAK/STAT
- JAK/Ras ->
myc/fos pathway
- JAK/PI3K -> Akt
(blocks apoptosis)
- Regulators
- Important in the differentiation of
colony forming unit lineages
- Burst promoting activity
- (Erythroid) BFU-E cell line
- Erythropoietin
- (Erythroid) CFU-E cell line
- A glycoprotein hormone (produced in the kidneys) - stimulates
the production of RBCs by stem cells i bone marrow
- Secretion is stimulated in response to low
O2 (by the juxtaglomerular O2 sensor)
- Secreted to balance RBC production with RBC loss
- Colony stimulating factor (CSF)
- (Granulocyte-monocyte)
CFU-GM cell line
- Megakaryocytic
stimulating activity
- (Megakaryocytes)
CFU-M cell line
- Thrombopoietin
- Megakaryocytes
- (TPO) - the major cytokine (glycoprotein hormone) that
determines the proliferation of megakaryocytes (produce platelets)
- Produced in liver and kidneys
- Blood cell development
- Primitive stem cell
(haemacytoblast)
- Erythrocyte series
- Erythrocyte
development
- HSC
- Common myeloid
progenitor
- Burst promoting activity
- +
- BFU-E
- CFU-E
- Rubriblast (proerythroblast)
- First identifiable RBC precursor
- Prorubricyte
- Rubricyte (normoblast)
- Looks like a monocyte - but much smaller
- Metarubricyte (loses
nucleus at this stage)
- Reticulocyte (aka diffusely
basophilic erythrocyte)
- Erythrocyte
(mature red cell)
- Erythropoietin (EPO)
- +
- Leukocyte series
- Thrombocyte series
- Different blood cell types
- Erythrocytes
- Biconcave disc
- Approximately 7um in diameter
- Non-nucleated
- Contains haemoglobin (Hb)
- Major function is
O2/CO2 transport
- Leukocytes
- Granulocytes (Myeloid)
- Neutrophils
- 12-15um diameter
- characterised by segemented
nucleus (2-5 lobes = normal)
- Dense chromatin with
regions of parachromatin
(lighter areas) = lobes
and nodes
- Slightly eosinophilic (pinky) cytoplasm
- Important in inflammatory processes
(phagocytes and mediators)
- Eosinophils
- Most readily reconisable - due to orange granules
- 12-15um diameter
- 2-3 lobes to nucleus
- Normally represent 0-6% of WBCs in blood
- Granules contain; major basic
protein (MBP) - toxic to parasites
- Basophil
- Contain purple/black large granules
(may obscure the nucelus)
- 2-3 lobes to nucleus
- 12-15um diameter
- Contain; heparin and large amaounts of histamine
(involved in hypersensitivity reactions - mediated
inflammation to antigen responses)
- Monocyes
- Largest cells in peripheral blood (12-20um)
- Abundant blue/grey (sometimes pinky)
cytoplasm, with small granules
- Fine reddist granules may be seen
- Phagocytes - frequently contain vacuoles
- Can migrate into tissues (where they are called macrophages)
- Central role in the inflammatroy process -
replace neutrophils during chronic inflammation
- Lymphocytes (Lymphoid)
- Vary in size (7-20um) and
nuclear:cytoplasmic ratio
- Small lymphocytes (7-12um)
have rounded nucleus with dense
chromatin and little cytoplasm
- Can appear much larger
(15-20um) with more cytoplasm
and irregularly-round nucleus
- Represent 15-60% of
peripheral blood
- Bone marrow sampling and analysis
- Myeloid:erythroid (ME) cell ratios
- Provides information on the
relative numbers of WBCs,
RBCs and their precursors
- In a healthy adult the number of WBC
precursors exceeds the number of
RBC precursors by 3 or 4 to 1
- This ratio changes in disease (increased
in infection, dominated by myelocytes and
other WBC precursors in leukaemia)
- Cytochemistry, flow cytometry,
electronic resistance and lightscattering
- Cytochemistry - chemical stains that react
with cytoplasmic components and define
different cells in blood and bone marrow
- Blood cells contain multiple enzymes, fats and
other substances that can be detected (important
in the diagnosis of myelocytic leukaemias)
- FAB( french-american-british)
classification of acute
leukaemias is based on
morphology and cytochemistry
- Most important cytochemical studies
in the study of acute leukaemia are
- Myeloperoxidase (MPO)
- Lysosomal enzyme
in myelocytes
- Staining can reveal acute
leukaemias (of myeloid lineage)
- Non-specific esterase
- Acid phosphatase (AP)
- Stains lysosomal acid
phosphatase - can
detect hair cell leukaemia
- Periodic acid
schiff (PAS) stain
- Stains polysaccharides (e.g. glycogen)
- Flow cytometry - allows
identification of blood cells
according to different
molecules on the cells
- Electronic resistance
- Cells pass through aperture with electric current
across it (changes in current due to differernt cell
sizes detected) - automated counting
- Light scattering
- Cells counted as they pass
through a focused laser
- Results sum of
- Diffraction - bending of light around corners
- Refraction - bending due to change in speed
- Reflection - light rays reflected back by obstructive structures