1. Hematopoiesis Flashcards Preview

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Flashcards in 1. Hematopoiesis Deck (57)
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1
Q

What do adventitial cells do?

A

Produce reticular fibers

(Create the “chicken wire” cage for cells in the bone marrow)

Secrete cytokines

2
Q

What hormone regulates erythropoiesis?

A

Erythropoietin (EPO)

3
Q

What are the official names for a maturure neutrophil?

A

Polymorphonuclear neutrophil

Segmented neutrophil

4
Q

When might you see more reticulocytes in the blood under physiologic conditions?

A

During periods of increased blood production (eg, more EPO signaling)

5
Q

What might cause hypocellular marrow?

A

Aplastic anemia

Chemotherapy

6
Q

What are the two types of bone sample biopsies, and which type is better for determining cellularity?

A

Bone marrow aspirate and Bone marrow core biopsy

Bone marrow core biopsy maintains the structure, and is better for determining cellularity

7
Q

Where do older people (older than 25, that is) have most of their hematopoiesis occur?

A

In the flat bones

(Ribs, Sternum, Vertebrae)

8
Q

What follows an orthochromatophilic erythroblast in hematopoiesis?

What characteristic of the descendent shows this change?

A

Polychromatophilic erythrocyte (reticulocyte)

Almost entirely eosinophilic cells (somewhat basophilic sometimes)

Few polyribosomes

9
Q

What demographic would have an increased amount of yellow bone marrow?

A

Older populations

10
Q

What descendant of the Common Myeloid Progenitor (CMP) differentiates into dendritic cells, neutrophils, mast cells, eosinophils, and monocytes?

A

Granulocyte / Monocyte progenitor (CFU-GM)

11
Q

What follows a basophilic erythroblast in hematopoiesis?

What characteristic of the descendent shows this change?

A

Polychromatophillic erythroblast

Polychromatophillic erythroblasts have some basophilic portions (polyribosomes making Hb) and some eosinophillic regions (Hb itself, stains with eosin). Also the nucleus is smaller, and you may see a checkerboard pattern to the nucleus)

12
Q

What are the four common progenitors after the granulocyte / monocyte progenitor (CFU-GM) for basophils, eosinophils, and neutrophils?

A

Myeloblast

Promyelocyte

Myelocyte

Metamyelocyte

13
Q

What two places do immature neutrophils (band cells) “hang out” waiting to respond to demand?

A

Reserve pool (5 days in bone marrow)

Marginated pool (stuck to endothelial walls)

14
Q

What follows a polychromatophilic erythroblast in hematopoiesis?

What characteristic of the descendent shows this change?

A

Orthochromatophilic erythroblast (normoblast)

More acidic (eosinophilic / pink) cytoplasm

No longer capable of divison

Begin extruding nucleus

15
Q

Which type of bone marrow is more hematopoietically active?

A

Red bone marrow

16
Q

What is interesting about the division of cells that creates a megakaryocyte?

A

It occurs without cytokinesis, resulting in a large nucleus. This is also called “successive endomitosis.”

  • Karyo- means “relating to the nucleus of a cell”*
  • # Darrenfacts*
17
Q

What is the Monophyletic Theory?

A

The theory that describes the idea that all blood cells are derived from a single pluripotent hemopoietic stem cell

18
Q

What follows the monocyte progenitor cell / monoblast in monocyte development?

A

Promonocyte

19
Q

What follows down the line to erythrocyte from a proerythroblast?

A

Basophilic erythroblast

20
Q

What happens to make a promonocyte a monocyte?

A

It divides two or three more times. The last division is a monocyte.

21
Q

What signaling molecules are required for monocyte development?

A

PU.1

Egr-1

IL-3

GM-CSF

22
Q

At what stage of granulopoiesis do we start to see specificity between neutrophils, basophils, and eosinophils?

A

The myelocyte phase

This is where we see granules form that are specific to the granulocyte the cell intends to become. Cells will be named as such, eosinophilic myelocyte, basophilic myelocyte, etc. based on their destination.

23
Q

Which type of bone marrow is 50/50 adipose and hematopoietic tissue?

A

Yellow Bone Marrow

24
Q

What two signaling molecules stimulate basophil, eosinophil, neutrophil, and monocyte production?

A

IL-3

GM-CSF

25
Q

Where are T lymphocytes produced, and where are they developed?

A

Produced in the bone marrow, develop in the thymus.

26
Q

What changes ErP’s (Erythrocyte Progenitors, AKA Erythropoietin Sensitive Erythrocyte Committed Progenitors, AKA Erythrocyte Colony Forming Units) into Proerythroblasts and is therefore responsible for terminal differentiation into the erythroid lineage?

A

GATA-1

27
Q

What two cells does the hemopoietic stem cell (the common ancestor for all blood cells) divide into?

A

Common Myeloid Progenitor

Common Lymphoid Progenitor

28
Q

What signaling molecules are essential for initiating thrombopoiesis?

A

GM-CSF (granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor)

IL-3

29
Q

In thrombopoiesis, what follows the MKP (megakaryocyte progenitor) stage?

A

Megakaryoblast

30
Q

What do metamyelocytes give rise to?

A

Banded Cells

31
Q

What two signaling molecules are required for B lymphocyte development?

A

Ikaros

Pax5

32
Q

What are the first three cellular stages in lymphopoiesis?

A

Hemopoietic stem cell

Common lymphoid progenitor

Pre- (T, B, Natural Killer) cell

33
Q

What is the last common progenitor for erythropoiesis and thrombopoiesis?

A

Megakaryocyte / Erythrocyte Progenitor (MEP)

34
Q

Where do fetal hematopoietic islands develop from?

A

Hemangioblasts

35
Q

What might cause hypercellular marrow?

A

Leukemia :(

36
Q

What three signaling molecules are responsible for the changeover from common myeloid progenitor cell to megakaryocyte-committed progenitor cells (MEPs).

A

EPO

IL-3

IL-4

37
Q

What two signaling molecules cause the differentiation of monocytes into macrophages?

A

GM-CSF

M-CSF

38
Q

What hormone upregulates thrombopoiesis, and where is it produced?

A

Thrombopoietin

Liver (primarily) and Kidneys

39
Q

In thrombopoiesis, what follows the megakaryoblast stage?

A

The megakaryocyte itself

40
Q

What two signaling molecules are required for T lymphocyte development?

A

Ikaros

GATA-3

41
Q

At what stage does an erythroblast extrude its nucleus and become incapable of division?

A

At the orthochromatophilic erythroblast (normoblast) stage

42
Q

When does the bone marrow become the primary site of hematopoiesis in fetal development?

A

The 7th month

43
Q

Where does hematopoiesis occur in the 2nd trimester?

A

Liver and Spleen

44
Q

Why do some say that neutrophils and basophils don’t have a band cell precursor?

A

Because their granules are so intensely staining that their band cells are impossible to differentiate.

45
Q

Where does hemopoiesis begin in the first trimester?

A

Hematopoietic islands of the umbillical vessicle (yolk sac)

46
Q

What do we call the cytoplasmic processes of the megakaryocyte that pass into the sinusoids?

A

Proplatelets

47
Q

What does a Megakaryocyte committed Progenitor cell (MEP) divide into?

A

Erythropoietin sensitive erythrocyte committed progenitors

(ErP / CFU-E [Colony Forming Unit - Erythrocyte])

Megakaryocyte Progenitor

48
Q

Where do young people (ages 9 to 25) have the most hematopoiesis?

A

In the long bones

(Tibia and Femur)

49
Q

What is a general term for the descendents of Common Myeloid Progenetors (CMPs)?

A

Lineage-restricted progenitors

Note: This term is not used for the descendents of CLPs.

50
Q

What follows a Granulocyte Monocyte Progenitor (GMP) in monocyte development?

A

Monocyte progenitor cell (MoP)

or

Monoblast

51
Q

What do we call the change in neutrophil ratios due to high demand? (Eg: massive infection)

A

Left neutrophil shift

(Towards more immature neutrophils)

52
Q

In thrombopoiesis, what follows the MEP stage?

A

Megakaryocyte Progenitor (MKP)

53
Q

Which granulocyte’s band cells can you possibly identify?

A

Neutrophil’s

54
Q

What is a sinusoid in bone marrow?

A

Sinusoids are unique vascular units that enter bone marrow to allow blood cells to enter circulation

55
Q

How do you calculate normal cellularity (ratio of hematopoietic cells to adipocytes in bone marrow)?

A

100 - AGE ± 10%

Eg: age 35 = 55% - 75%

56
Q

Which cell populations develop closer to the sinusoidal wall in bone marrow, and which are farther away?

A

Erythrocytes and Megakaryocytes develop closer to the sinusoidal wall

Granulocytes develop farther away

(Granulocytes can migrate better?)

57
Q

What is a characteristic of the endothelial lining of a sinusoid that helps cells enter circulation?

A

The basement membrane of the endothelial lining is discontinuous