🌭 Salami or Thymus? 🔬
Some of these your high street butcher sells,
The rest are high mag Hassall’s corpuscles!
Can you identify the type VI epithelioreticular cells among the spicy imposters?
The thymus is a primary lymphoid organ: a site where immature T-cells (a type of lymphocyte) are ‘educated’.
Thymic education is a process that ensures naive, newborn T-cells only of recognize MHC (major histocompatability complex) and non-self (foreign) antigen. Cells that do not pass a series of ‘educational tests’ in the thymus are destroyed. This makes sure that all mature T-cells that enter the circulation will not recognize our own cells and proteins as foreign - thus avoiding the triggering of an autoimmune response.
Epithelioreticular cells (ERCs) are important cells in this education process There are six different types given roman numeral names I-VI.
Type I ERCs form the thymus-blood barrier between our blood that is filled with self/non-self antigen and the naive T-cells in the thymus awaiting education.
Type II ERCs are the level 1 educators. They present MHC-I/II proteins to naive T-cells to see if they can identify them. The T-cells that identify them pass this first test (positive selection) and those that don’t are eliminated. Most T-cells fail this test and are eliminated.
Type III and Type IV ERCs lie most likely allow passage of selected T-cells to the next ERCs.
Type V ERCs are the level 2 educators.They have long spindley legs covered with fragments of self antigen. If a T-cell binds one of these proteins it is eliminated from circulation and only those that do not bind reach maturity (negative selection).
Type VI ERCs (Hassall’s corpuscles) are a key histological feature of the thymus however their function (if any) is not well understood.
I’m disturbed yet hungry




















