Changes in the morphology and the distribution of rat intestinal eosinophils during infection with the nematode nippostrongylus brasiliensis

1998 
Increases in the numbers of eosinophil leukocytes present in the lamina propria of intestines infected with nematodes is a well described phenomenon, yet the role of these leukocytes and their actions in this situation are not yet fully understood. Morphologic changes in these cells occur with the course of the infection, as do alterations in their location within the gut; these findings may give important clues to the function of this prominent cell. We observed changes in intestinal eosinophils in the August rat during infection with the nematode Nippostrongylus brasiliensis and found, together with the well known increases in number infiltrating the lamina propria at Day 20 (three times the levels in normal animals), a distinct change in the morphology of individual cells which included increase of the cell's overall size and changes in shape, as well as a dissemination of cytoplasmic granules in relationship to the cell's nucleus. No ultrastructural evidence of extracellular degranulation or intact eosinophil cytoplasmic granules outside the bounds of cell cytoplasmic membranes was seen. This finding is important considering the light microscopic appearance of individual eosinophil granules apparently distributed extracellularly, and lying in the connective tissue of the lamina propria, a common histopathologic observation in eosinophilic conditions. Eosinophils within the lamina propria changed their location as the infection progressed, tending to move to line up along the subepithelial zones. In addition, eosinophils were observed both at the light and electron microscopic levels to be passing through the basement membrane and into the epithelial layer. This latter phenomenon was confirmed using confocal optical slicing where eosinophils were commonly observed on the luminal side of the nuclei of the gut epithelium. These observations strongly suggest that morphologic alterations occur in eosinophils in the lamina propria and these changes may be associated with functional alterations in these cells akin to the putative phenomenon of "activation." Our findings indicate that eosinophils have the capacity to enlarge and extend their cytoplasmic processes between various components of the lamina propria and move toward the basement membrane during an active infection, as well as into, and possibly through, the intestinal epithelium. These findings emphasize the need for careful consideration of the changing morphologic status of eosinophils when investigating biologic changes associated with the activation of these cells in tissue inflammatory responses.
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