Immunology| Hematopoiesis - Formation of blood cells in English

Immunology| Hematopoiesis - Formation of blood cells in English

#hematology #immunology #immunecells Formation of immune cells Early in hematopoiesis, a multipotent stem cell differentiates along one of two pathways, giving rise to either a common lymphoid progenitor cell or a common myeloid or progenitor cell. The types and amounts of growth factors in the microenvironment of a particular stem cell or progenitor cell control its differentiation. During the development of the lymphoid and myeloid lineages, stem cells differentiate into progenitor cells, which have lost the capacity for self-renewal and are committed to a particular cell lineage. Common lymphoid progenitor cells give rise to B, T, and NK (natural killer) cells and some dendritic cells. Myeloid stem cells generate progenitors of red blood cells (erythrocytes), many of the various white blood cells (neutrophils, eosinophils, basophils, monocytes, mast cells, dendritic cells) and platelets. Progenitor commitment depends on the acquisition of responsiveness to particular growth factors and cytokines. When the appropriate factors and cytokines are present, progenitor cells proliferate and differentiate into the corresponding cell type, either a mature erythrocyte, a particular type of leukocyte, or a platelet-generating cell (the megakaryocyte). Red and white blood cells pass into bone marrow channels, from which they enter the circulation.