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CHAPTER 8 - HEMATOPOIESIS
Histology Guide
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MICROSCOPE SLIDE

SLIDE NAME
MH 034bhr Bone Marrow Smear
TISSUE
Bone Marrow Smear
(human)
STAIN
Wright's Stain
(mixture of methylene blue,
azure II, and eosin)
FIXATIVE
Air Dry
Methanol
IMAGE SIZE
18,540 x 17,548 pixels
1.2 GB
FILE SIZE
73 MB
OBJECTIVE
60x
(oil immersion objective)
PIXEL SIZE
0.0976 µm
SOURCE
Department of Genetics, Cell Biology, and Development
School of Medicine
University of Minnesota
Minneapolis, MN

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Faculty/Retired
University of Minnesota
Department of Genetics, Cell Biology and Development
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Robert L. Sorenson, Ph.D.

Professor Emeritus
University of Minnesota
Department of Genetics, Cell Biology and Development
6-160 Jackson Hall
321 Church St SE
Minneapolis, MN 55455

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MH 034bhr Bone Marrow Smear

Eosinophilic Myelocyte

Eosinophils develop from the multipotential myeloid stem cell (CFU-GEMM) which differentiates into eosinophilic progenitor cells (CFU-Eo).

Eosinophilic myeloblasts are produced from progenitor cells (CFU-Eo) under the influence of cytokines. The eosinophil myeloblast matures into an eosinophilic promyelocyte. These cells cannot be distinguished from cells at the same stage in other granulocyte lineages.

Eosinophilic myelocyte is the first recognizable precursor of eosinophils.

  • Large cells (18 to 20 µm diameter)
  • Round, oval, or indented nucleus (50% of cell) with a coarser, granular pattern of chromatin
  • Cytoplasm is pale blue
  • Very eosinophilic, specific granules begin to accumulate
  • Azurophilic granules
  • Last cell type capable of mitosis

Examples:

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Eosinophilic Metamyelocyte

The eosinophilic myelocyte matures into an eosinophilic metamyelocyte.

  • Smaller cells (12 to 17 µm diameter)
  • Nucleus is dented, kidney shaped (50% of cell) of mostly heterochromatin
  • Cytoplasm ranges from blue-gray to pink-gray
  • Eosinophilic, specific granules that range from blue-gray to red
  • Few azurophilic granules
  • No longer capable of mitosis

Examples:

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Band Eosinophil

The eosinophilic metamyelocyte matures into a band eosinophil.

  • Smaller cells (10 to 12 µm diameter)
  • Nucleus is elongated and often has a horseshoe-like appearance that contains mostly heterochromatin
  • Cytoplasm is a pale blue-pink
  • Eosinophilic, specific granules that range from blue-gray to red
  • Few azurophilic granules
  • No longer capable of mitosis

Examples:

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Eosinophil

The band eosinophil develops into a mature eosinophil. Eosinophils phagocytose immune complexes and kill bacteria.

  • 12 to 15 µm diameter
  • Nucleus is bilobed
  • Cytoplasm is a pale blue-pink
  • Eosinophilic, specific granules - oval, 1 to 1.5 µm diameter, red/orange
  • Few azurophilic granules
  • No longer capable of mitosis

Examples:

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Mature eosinophils are released from bone marrow into the peripheral circulation. They circulate in the blood 8 to 16 hrs. Their tissue life span is only 2 to 5 days.

© 2005-2026. T. Clark Brelje and Robert L. Sorenson