An immunohistochemical study was performed on three groups of young cattle (21, 60 and 300 days of age). Tonsils (palatine and pharyngeal) and mucosae (nasal and oral) were removed. Eight monoclonal antibodies (specific for CD3, CD2, CD4, CD8, WC1, cell-surface IgM, cell-surface IgG and MHC class II molecules) and an avidin/biotin complex method on frozen sections were used. The immunological cytoarchitecture of bovine tonsils is similar to that of human tonsils. Nevertheless, these lymphoid tissues are not fully developed during the first weeks of life: T and B dependent areas not well-differentiated, few germinal centres, few intra-epithelial WC1+ T lymphocytes. In contrast, at 2 months, tonsils possess all the elements of a mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT). Tonsillar or mucosal epithelium is infiltrated by a large number of CD8+, WC1+ T lymphocytes and cells which express MHC class II molecules. Between 21 and 60 days, the number of WC1+ T lymphocytes increase markedly in the tonsillar epithelium. These results accredit the hypothesis that the presence of antigens has an effect on the localization of these lymphocytes at these sites.
Many monoclonal antibodies reactive with bovine leukocyte differentiation antigens are now available. Immunohistochemical staining on frozen sections using these monoclonal antibodies permits study of the functional morphology of bovine spleen. This study confirms accepted notions (B and T dependent-zones) and supplies complementary data about the repartition of CD4 and CD8 cells, gamma delta T cells, MHC (Major Histocompatibility Complex) II expression, and macrophages.
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