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Morphological and Phenotypical Diversity of Eosinophils in the Rat Ileum

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Journal Cell Tissue Res
Date 2020 May 20
PMID 32424506
Citations 6
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Abstract

Eosinophils are abundantly present in intestinal mucosa. However, the morphological characteristics of their cellular population are still largely unknown. In this study, we examine their characteristics in the rat ileal mucosa using histological and ultrastructural methods. The results indicated that ileal eosinophils could be distinguished into two main groups based on their nuclear shapes and distribution: eosinophils with spheric or reniform nuclei mainly localized in the villous region and eosinophils with annular or bacilliform nuclei as the major population around crypts. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed that all eosinophils in the lamina propria (LP) were immunopositive for CD11b, whereas eosinophils in LP of the intestinal villus but not those in LP around the crypt, were immunopositive for CD11c. Three-dimensional ultrastructural analysis using serial block-face scanning electron microscopy showed that the eosinophils with spheric or reniform nuclei were abundant in the upper portions of the intestinal villus, whereas those with annular nuclei were abundant in the lower portions of the intestinal villus and around crypts. The eosinophils with spheric or reniform nuclei possessed broader cellular bodies with greater abundance of surface projections compared with those with annular nuclei. Eosinophils in the upper portions of intestinal villus frequently extended their cellular bodies into the intraepithelial space. The number of total and eosinophil-specific granules was positively correlated with the minor axis of the nuclear holes in the annular nuclei. These data suggest that ileal eosinophils exhibit not homogenous but rather diverse characteristics, possible due to the mixture of eosinophils at different maturation and/or activation stages.

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