Characteristics of histiocytic lesions in the reticuloendothelial system of NZB mice.

2008 
The so-called Potter's lesion, previously described as preneoplastic in the lymph nodes of C58 mice, develops frequently in autoimmune NZB mice. These lesions were characterized in the present study by bands or sheets of palestaining histiocytic cells in the cortex and medulla of the lymph node, and multiple small nodules of the same cells were found in the red pulp of the spleen and the liver. Electron microscopically, the cells had pleomorphic cytoplasm with long processes, electron-dense bodies, abundant mitochondria, and a characteristic labyrinth structure with many C-type viruses. Mac-1 antigen, IgG-Fc receptor, ferritin, and ACPase activity were identified on these cells. Intraperitoneally-injected iron colloids were found in the lesions of the spleen and liver but not in those of the lymph nodes. The lymph node lesions appeared when the mice were about 3 months of age and enlarged until the mice were around 10 months old, after which they gradually receded and were replaced by small vessels and fibroblastic cells. These data indicate that the lesions represent reactive hyperplasia of the macrophage system and may have no direct association with the development of malignant lymphoma in NZB mice.
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