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Development of lymphoid tissue in a marsupial, Setonix brachyurus (quokka).
Authors:R B Ashman  J M Papadimitriou
Abstract:The development of the lymphoid tissues in a macropod marsupial is described. The liver is the only functional haemopoietic tissue at birth. Large lymphocytes first appear in the cervical thymus at 2 days, and in the thoracic thymus at 4 days after birth. Small lymphocytes appear 1-2 days later. The histological development of the two glands is similar, but the thoracic thymus develops much more slowly than the cervical. The appearance of Hassall's corpuscles in both thymus glands correlates with the onset of humoral immune responses in this animal. Lymph nodes first appear as aggregates of lymphocytes around the lymphatic vessels at 5 days, differentiate into cortex and medulla at about 14 days, but do not develop germinal centres until about 90 days. Small lymphocytes are not observed in the spleen until the 2nd week, and reactive centres do not appear until after 90 days of pouch life. Peyer's patches are not found until 60 days of age. Large lymphocytes are seen in the bone marrow at 14 days, but small lymphocytes are not found until the 1st month. Although the sequence of lymphoid development is similar to that seen in other animals, the rapidly with which it becomes functional suggests that it is an adaptive response to early contact with environment pathogens.
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