Abstract

A qualitative and quantitative comparison of resident peritoneal macrophages (RPM) from beige (C57BL6Jbg/bg), (bg), and control black (C57BL/6J), (BL), mice has been made. Giant anomalous lysosomes as described for other leukocytes are inconsistently demonstrable. The principal morphological expression of the bg phenotype in RPM is the presence of elongated dumbbell-shaped, horseshoe-shaped, and ring-formed cytoplasmic lysosomes demonstrable by electron microscopy. Detailed analysis indicates that these are probably variations of the same basic structure, a deformed biconcave disc with differences in form resulting from their being cut in various planes of section. Additional structural complexity results from fusion between adjacent lysosomes. Thus the distinctive lysosomes of bg mouse RPM are not totally analogous to those structures described in other cell types. A morphometric analysis of control RPM compared to those from bg animals shows a significant decrease in the lysosomal volume proportion from 5.8% to 5.0% (P less than 0.02) with a corresponding increase in the mitochondrial volume proportion in cells from bg animals (P less than 0.05). There are no differences between bg and controls in regard to cellular profile areas, nuclear profile areas, nuclear volume proportions, and the volume to surface ratios of either the average cell or nucleus. This study represents the first compilation by morphometric methods of total granule content in the bg animal and demonstrates the ability of these techniques to detect significant quantitative changes in cells as structurally complex as mononuclear phagocytes.

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