What are the 3 sources of lymphocytes?
Where are the 4 sites of lymphocyte development?
Where are the 5 sites in which lymphocytes respond to antigens?
Where lymphocytes are generated and matured is known as?
Primary lymphoid tissue
Where does the production of stem cells occur?
Bone marrow
Where does specialisation occur?
Thymus
What is the role of secondary lymphoid tissue?
Where lymphocytes interact with antigen presenting cells
What happens to T-cells in the thymus?
- T cells arrive as immature thymocytes and leave as mature T cells
Through which structure do T-cells gain access into the thymus?
Hassans Corpuscles
Describe the tissue arrangement of the thymus
Describe what happens to T-cells in the cortex and medualla
Corex: Thymocytes mature to adult T-lymphocytes and then migrate to the…
Medulla: T-cells are presented with antigens and thymic selection occurs where survivors become functional T-cells
How does the thymus change as aging occurs?
More fatty and atrophied areas develop, it is smaller but still functional
Where do lymph nodes drain fluid?
Into afferent lymphatic vessels
Via what do lymphocytes recirculate into the blood from lymph nodes?
Afferent lymphatics and thoracic duct
Which tissue are of the lymph node contains high endothelial venules?
Paracortex
What is the function of high endothelial venules?
What is a germinal centre?
An area of discrete lymphocyte proliferation
What are the 3 functions of lymph?
What is the main key difference between the lymph system and the blood system?
Central pump in blood system but no pump in the lymph system so lymph drains slowly
What is the role of the spleen?
- Without a spleen there is nowhere for lymphocytes to recirculate so if reinfected there won’t be antibodies present
What is red and white pulp?
Red pulp = open sinusoids containing RBCs
White pulp = Lymphocytes
What colour does white pulp stain with H and E?
Blue
Where is mucosa-associated lymph tissue (MALT) found?
Describe the structure of MALT