Lymphocyte

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Image:PBLymphozyt.jpgA lymphocyte is a type of white blood cell involved in the human body's immune system. There are two broad categories of lymphocytes, namely T cells and B cells. Lymphocytes play an important and integral part of the body's defenses.

T cells are chiefly responsible for cell-mediated immunity whereas B cells are primarily responsible for humoral immunity (relating to antibodies). T cells are named such because these lymphocytes mature in the thymus; B cells, named for the bursa of Fabricius in which they mature in bird species, are thought to mature in the bone marrow in humans.

In the presence of an antigen, B cells can become much more metabolically active and differentiate into plasma cells, which secrete large quantities of antibodies.

Microscopically, in a Wright's stained peripheral blood smear, a normal lymphocyte has a large, dark-staining nucleus with little to no basophilic cytoplasm. In normal situations, the coarse, dense nucleus of a lymphocyte is approximately the size of a red blood cell (about 7 micrometres in diameter). Some lymphocytes show a clear perinuclear zone (or halo) around the nucleus or could exhibit a small clear zone to one side of the nucleus.

It is impossible to distinguish between T cells and B cells in a peripheral blood smear. Normally, flow cytometry testing is used for specific lymphocyte population counts. When one must specifically determine the percentage of lymphocytes that produce a particular secretion (say, a specific antibody or cytokine), the ELISPOT or secretion assay techniques can be used instead.

The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) hijacks and destroys T cells (specifically, CD4+ lymphocytes). Without this key defense, the body is susceptible to opportunistic diseases that otherwise would not kill healthy people.

A lymphocyte count is part of a peripheral complete blood cell count and is expressed as percentage of lymphocytes to total white blood cells counted. An increase in lymphocytes is usually a sign of a viral infection (in some rare cases, leukemias are found through an abnormally raised lymphocyte count in an otherwise normal person). A general increase in the number of lymphocytes is known as lymphocytosis whereas a decrease is lymphocytopenia.

See also

Granulocytes Normal blood contains from 5000 to 9000 White Blood Cells (WBC’s) per cubic millimeter and 70 to 75% of them are granulocytes. These cells are formed and mature in the bone marrow and are continually being released into the blood. They make up 20 to 25% of the WBC’s. The granulocytes have multilobular nuclei and are 9 to 12 mm in diameter. (Out of the Texas Woman's University Microbiology Text Book.) link title]

Lymphatic system - edit
Lymph nodes | Lymph | Lymphocytes | Lymph vessels | Thoracic duct | Immune system | Bone marrow | Spleen | Thymus | Tonsils
Blood - Blood plasma - edit
Pluripotential hemopoietic stem cell | Red blood cells (ReticulocyteNormoblast) | White blood cells
Lymphocytes (Lymphoblast)
T cells (CytotoxicHelperRegulatory T cell) | B cells (Plasma cells & Memory B cells) | Natural killer cell
Myelocytes (Myeloblast)
Granulocytes (NeutrophilEosinophilBasophil) | Mast cell precursors | Monocytes (HistiocyteMacrophagesDendritic cellsLangerhans cells, MicrogliaKupffer cellsOsteoclasts) | Megakaryoblast | Megakaryocyte | Platelets
ca:Limfòcit

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