Otsuki Y, Maeda Y, Magari S, Sugimoto O
Department of Anatomy, Osaka Medical College, Japan.
Anat Rec. 1989 Dec;225(4):288-96. doi: 10.1002/ar.1092250405.
Lymphoid tissue of the human fallopian tube consists of follicles, lymphoepithelium, and lymphatic and blood capillaries and is located consistently in the interstitial part of the human fallopian tube. Using an immunoelectronmicroscopic technique, we have elucidated the ultrastructure of the lymphoid tissue of the human fallopian tube and the fine distribution and ultrastructure of the lymphatics associated with the rabbit fallopian tube. Lymphatic capillaries arise in the lamina propria mucosa and the periphery of follicles, where they are sparsely distributed, run through the muscular layer, and form a dense network in the subserosa. Characteristic features of the ultrastructure are aggregations of smooth muscle cells, alternating areas of densely and sparsely distributed collagen fibers, and unmyelinated nerve fibers beneath the lymphatic endothelium. Immunoelectronmicroscopic analysis has demonstrated an obvious difference in the distribution of T- and B-lymphocytes in the lymphoid tissue of the human fallopian tube. Many T-lymphocytes are present in the follicles and epithelium, but B-lymphocytes are either absent or rarely found. T-lymphocytes sometimes infiltrate into the basal lamina of the epithelium lying in close contact with the follicles. We conclude that the lymphoid tissue is constantly located in the interstitial part of the human fallopian tube and that intraepithelial lymphocytes, mainly T-lymphocytes, migrate via the basal lamina of the epithelium from follicles. Lymphatic capillaries in the fallopian tube may be the main migratory route of intraepithelial lymphocytes. The intraepithelial lymphocytes and epithelial cells of the fallopian tube have attracted considerable interest as a result of immunological studies of the recognition of spermatozoal antigens and the fertilized ovum.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)