Title of article :
Mast cells/eosinophilic granule cells of salmonids: staining properties and responses to noxious agents
Author/Authors :
REITE، نويسنده , , OLA B.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1997
Pages :
18
From page :
567
To page :
584
Abstract :
Observations were made on mast cells/eosinophilic granule cells in swimbladder tissue spreads and sections of gills and intestinal tissues from species of the generaSalmoOncorhynchusSalvelinusCoregonusThymallus. Some individuals had been reared in captivity and others were caught in rivers or lakes, and both apparently healthy fish and fish with persistent inflammation, due to helminths or unknown causative agents, were included in the study. Acute responses to noxious agents were studied in swimbladder tissue spreads after intraperitoneal injections of inactivatedAeromonas salmonicida, compound 48/80 and hydrocortisone. The tissue spreads were fixed in ethanol and stained with thionin. Other tissues were fixed in a solution containing 4% formaldehyde and 5% acetic acid in methanol, and stained with May-Grünwald Giemsa combination dye, haematoxylin and eosin, or Alcian blue. Intestinal tissue histamine was assayed fluorometrically, and vascular responses to histamine and compound 48/80 were studied in perfused gill preparations. The staining properties of salmonid mast cells/eosinophilic granule cells resembled those of mammalian mucosal mast cells and globule leucocytes, with both acidophilic and basophilic components in their granules. May-Grünwald Giemsa staining revealed that in cells found in connective tissues the basophilic character was dominant, whereas the acidophilic character was most marked in those present in epithelia. The granule cells in swimbladder tissue spreads stained metachromatically with alcoholic thionin. Intraperitoneal injections of inactivatedA. salmonicidaproduced acute inflammatory reactions, with degranulation of mast cells/eosinophilic granule cells, in tissues of the swimbladder. Degranulation of the granule cells was also noticed after injection of compound 48/80. Massive degranulation of mast cells/eosinophilic granule cells in the swimbladder wall, followed by an acute inflammatory reaction, was induced by intraperitoneal injections of hydrocortisone. Persistent inflammation, e.g. in tissues infected with helminths, was accompanied by recruitment of mast cells/eosinophilic granule cells. Presence of many or few mast cells/eosinophilic granule cells in tissues of the intestine seemed to have no influence on the content of histamine, which was always low. Compound 48/80 produced increased resistance in the perfused branchial vascular bed, but effects of histamine were slight or completely absent. The responses of mast cells/eosinophilic granule cells of salmonids in acute and persistent inflammation, as revealed in the present investigation, are similar to the known responses of mammalian mast cells. Since their staining properties are also similar, the term ‘mast cell’ should be adequate.
Keywords :
mast cell , eosinophilic granule cell , globule leucocyte , Salmonid fish , helminths , rodlet cell , Inflammatory response
Journal title :
Fish and Shellfish Immunology
Serial Year :
1997
Journal title :
Fish and Shellfish Immunology
Record number :
2106344
Link To Document :
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