A morphologic study of bronchus-associated lymphoid tissue in turkeys
- PMID: 2239743
- DOI: 10.1002/aja.1001890104
A morphologic study of bronchus-associated lymphoid tissue in turkeys
Abstract
Bronchus-associated lymphoid tissue (BALT) in normal turkeys of ages 1 day and 1, 2, 3, 4, 8, and 18 weeks was examined by light microscopy and by scanning and transmission electron microscopy. Turkey BALT resembled other mucosa-associated lymphoid tissues; it was made up of a population of lymphocytes covered by a specialized epithelium different from typical pseudostratified ciliated columnar bronchial epithelium. There were distinct age-related differences in BALT structure. Bronchus-associated lymphoid nodules were larger and more numerous in older turkeys. In 1-day- to 2-week-old turkeys, the primary cell type of BALT epithelium was nonciliated cuboidal; in 2-week old turkeys it was squamous; and in turkeys older than 4-weeks of age, the epithelium was primarily ciliated columnar. In 1- to 4-week old turkeys, large numbers of intraepithelial lymphocytes disrupted the normal organization of the epithelium. In older turkeys, epithelial and lymphoid cells were in discrete compartments separated by connective tissue. Lymphocytes in 1-day-old turkeys were found in loose aggregates around venules and within the epithelium. In 1-week old turkeys, lymphocytes were organized into compartments of morphologically similar cells. By 3-weeks of age, lymphocytes were present in distinct germinal centers. Epithelial cells of BALT did not have large numbers of apical vesicles and thus were not structurally specialized for antigen uptake by endocytosis. However, the epithelial barrier appeared to be disrupted over lymphoid nodules, suggesting that antigen would be readily available to lymphocytes and phagocytes in BALT. Age-related differences in turkey BALT structure may have functional consequences with respect to the respiratory immune response.
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