Histology, Immunohistochemistry and Ultrastructure of the Equine Palatine Tonsil

2005 
Summary The palatine tonsils of five young horses formed 10–12 cm elongated follicular structures extending from the root of the tongue on either side to the base of the epiglottis and lateral to the glossoepiglottic fold. The stratified squamous non-keratinized epithelium of the outer surface was modified into crypts as reticular epithelium by heavy infiltration of lymphoid cells from underlying lymphoid follicles. In places, lymphoid tissue reaching almost to the surface and with only one to two cell layers intact was identified as the lymphoepithelium. Langerhans cells with Birbeck granules were interspersed between epithelial cells. Lymphoid tissue organized in lymphoid follicles constituted the parenchyma of the palatine tonsil. CD4-positive cells were more numerous and CD8-positive lymphocytes less numerous compared with their distribution in the lingual tonsil. B cells and macrophages were also more numerous than in the lingual tonsil and lectins showed a different pattern of attachment. M cells were not observed. High endothelial venules with well-developed vesiculo-vacuolar organelle had structural evidence of transendothelial and interendothelial migration of lymphocytes. Striated muscles as seen in the deeper lamina propria mucosae of the lingual tonsil were absent. The immunohistological and ultrastructural characteristics of the equine palatine tonsil are similar to those of humans but differ from those of the lingual tonsil and are consistent with a role as an effector and inductor immunological organ.
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