B lymphocyte compartments in the human splenic red pulp: capillary sheaths and periarteriolar regions

2014 
The microvasculature of human spleens is still incompletely understood. Two enigmatic types of red pulp microvessels, penicillar arterioles and sheathed capillaries, have already been described in the nineteenth century without gaining much attention afterwards. We performed a detailed analysis of sheathed capillaries to clarify the cellular composition of their sheaths by immunohistological double-staining experiments. Capillary sheaths comprise three different cell types, namely specialized cuboidal CD271++ inner sheath cells surrounded by CD271− macrophages and accumulations of B lymphocytes. The CD271++ inner sheath cells express the chemokine CXCL13 in a unique single dot pattern. Sheath-associated B lymphocytes consist of IgM+, IgD++, and of “switched” cells. T lymphocytes do not accumulate in pericapillary sheaths. The predominant sheath-associated macrophage population is CD163CD68+ and thus differs from the majority of red pulp macrophages. The sheath-associated macrophages strongly express CD169 only in perifollicular sheaths, but not in sheaths located deeper in the red pulp. IgM+, IgD++, and “switched” B cells are also closely associated with red pulp arterioles characterized by the expression of smooth muscle actin in muscle cells and in branched periarteriolar stromal cells. Capillary sheaths are observed in a post-arteriolar position and appear to be of limited length. We suggest to change the term “Vagina periarteriolaris makrophagocytica” of the international histological and embryological terminologies to “Vagina pericapillaris.”
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