NUCLEAR MORPHOLOGY AND MORPHOMETRY OF LYMPHOCYTE-B TRANSFORMATION - IMPLICATIONS FOR FOLLICULAR CENTER CELL LYMPHOMAS
- 1 January 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 111 (1) , 35-49
Abstract
One of the major tenets of current [human] non-Hodgkin''s lymphoma classifications is the relationship of morphologic subtypes to stages in the sequence of normal B lymphocyte transformation occurring in the germinal follicle. To test this hypothesis, quantitative morphometric image analysis was carried out on in vivo and in vitro samples of mouse splenic lymphocytes in which transformation was induced by bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS), a specific B-cell mitogen. Results were compared with a similar analysis of germinal center lymphocyte populations of normal human spleen. In the in vivo mouse model, initial stages of B-cell transformation were detectable as early as 4 h after LPS injection, and the process was essentially fully developed by 48-72 h. Quantitative evaluation revealed that the majority of nuclear profiles were nearly spherical or only slightly eccentric and that no major alteration in nuclear contour occurred during any phase of the progressive increase in nuclear size following mitogen-induced lymphocyte transformation. In this system, B lymphocyes with a nuclear profile cleft of .gtoreq. 0.4 .mu. accounted for only 3% of the combined unstimulated and LPS-activated population assessed (N = 9936). This compared with normal human spleen, in which 16% of germinal center lymphocyte populations had similarly cleft nuclear profiles. Sequential alterations in the organization of condensed chromatin occurred concomitant with gradual nuclear enlargement during mitogen-induced mouse spleen lymphocyte transformation. A comparative morphologic and morphometric assessment of nuclear profiles of lymphocyte populations in germinal centers of normal human spleen provides indirect evidence for a similar pattern of nuclear alterations in human B lymphocytes. Autoradiographic data obtained from LPS-activated mouse splenic lymphocytes indicate that nuclear morphologic aspects of the transformation process can occur entirely within the G1 phase of the cell cycle. Apparently, subtypes of non-Hodgkin''s lymphoma largely composed of neoplastic lymphocytes with extensively convoluted or cleft nuclei do not reflect a morphologic stage in the transformation of normal lymphocytes. The heterogeneous nuclear forms of follicular center cell lymphocytes would appear to result from parallel transformation processes involving cleaved and non-cleaved nucleated lymphocytes and not the sequential pathway proposed by Lukes and Collins.This publication has 51 references indexed in Scilit:
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