Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2430019 | Developmental & Comparative Immunology | 2009 | 11 Pages |
Coelomic cavity (CC) cells of mature zebrafish harvested by lavage with media or trypsin–EDTA contained 0.80–1.20 × 105 and 2.0–3.5 × 105 cells, respectively. Media lavage was composed of granulocytes (60–80%), lymphocytes (10–20%), and NCC (4–10%). Granulocytes had large electron dense cytoplasmic paracrystalline granules and a segmented nucleus; they expressed plastin-1, myeloid specific peroxidase and MCSF mRNA; and they were NCAMP-1+. Lymphocytes had B- and T-cell specific mRNA and were NCAMP-1− and NCCRP-1−. NCC were 3 μm, NCAMP-1+ and NCCRP-1+ and did not express B- and T-cell specific mRNA. Additionally, trypsin lavage contained monocytes (marginated chromatin, low nuclear:cytoplasm ratio, sparse cytosolic granules) and macrophages (non-segmented nuclei, no margination of chromatin, abundant electron dense granules). E. coli injected into the CC were phagocytosed in a dose and time dependent fashion by granulocytes, monocytes and macrophages. NCC lysed mammalian target cells and NCAMP-1 expressing hybridoma cells in redirected lysis assays.