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Cellular architecture of human skin lymphoma imaged by whole mount tissue microscopy. Normal human skin has a rich network of white blood cells (specifically dendritic cells, T cells and macrophages) which form sheaths around blood vessels. In diseased skin, such as in skin lymphoma as seen here, this normal architecture becomes distorted. In this image, lots of T cells (stained for CD3; red), dendritic cells (stained for CD11c; green) and macrophages (stained for LYVE-1; blue) have infiltrated the skin. X20 magnification. Scale bar (white) represents 100 micrometres.
Creator
- Muzlifah Haniffa, Newcastle University
Subject
- Wholemount
- Barriers
- Protection
- Network
- Immunology
- Immune response
- Leucocyte
- White blood cells
- T cell
- Connections
- …
Creator
- Muzlifah Haniffa, Newcastle University
Subject
- Wholemount
- Barriers
- Protection
- Network
- Immunology
- Immune response
- Leucocyte
- White blood cells
- T cell
- Connections
- …
Providing institution
Aggregator
Rights statement for the media in this item (unless otherwise specified)
- http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Rights
- Credit: Dr. Xiao-nong Wang, Human Dendritic Cell Laboratory, Newcastle University
Source
- B0009509
Identifier
- B0009509
- fvj6hmex
Providing country
- United Kingdom
Collection name
First time published on Europeana
- 2019-06-09T11:18:59.113Z
Last time updated from providing institution
- 2019-06-09T11:18:59.113Z