1 Red Blood Cell Maturation
Michelle To and Valentin Villatoro
Pronormoblast (Rubriblast, Proerythroblast)
Notes: Largest of the RBC maturation series 1
Nucleus-to-Cytoplasm Ratio: 8:1 (High) 1,2
Nucleoli: 0-2 2,3
Nucleus:1-3
Round to oval, central
Fine, homogeneous chromatin
Reddish-blue colour under Wright stain
Cytoplasm:1-3
Small to moderate amount of cytoplasm
Dark blue cytoplasm (due to large RNA content)
Golgi may be seen (pale area next to the nucleus)
% in Bone Marrow: 1% 1-3
Basophilic Normoblast (Prorubricyte, Basophilic Erythroblast)
Notes: Smaller than Pronormoblasts 3
Nucleus-to-Cytoplasm Ratio: 6:1 1
Nucleoli: 0-1 2
Nucleus: 1-3
Round to slightly oval, central
Chromatin is coarser and slightly clumped
Dark violet in colour
Indistinct nuclei or not visible
Cytoplasm: 1,2
Dark blue (due to large RNA content)
May see a perinuclear halo (unstained mitocondria)
May have a slight pink tinge due to the production of hemoglobin
% in Bone Marrow: 1-5% 3
Polychromatic Normoblast (Rubricyte, Polychromatic Erythroblast)
Notes: Last RBC maturation stage capable of mitosis 1
Nucleus-to-Cytoplasm Ratio: 4:1 1-3
Nucleoli: None 2
Nucleus: 1-3
Round, eccentric
Chromatin is coarse, irregularly clumped
Cytoplasm: 1,2
Abundant
Gray-blue to pink (due to hemoglobin production and RNA content)
% in Bone Marrow: 5-30% 3
% in Peripheral Blood: Normally NOT present in the peripheral blood but some may be seen in the peripheral blood smears of newborns.3
Orthochromic Normoblast (Metarubricyte, Orthochromatic Erythroblast)
Notes: The smallest RBC precursor and incapable of further DNA synthesis at this stage.3
Nucleus-to-Cytoplasm Ratio: 1:1 (Low) 3
Nucleoli: None 2-3
Nucleus: 1,2
Round, eccentric
Fully condensed chromatin with pyknotic features
Cytoplasm: 1,2
Pink or salmon; May appear slightly blue due to residual RNA
% in Bone Marrow: 5-10% 2
% in Peripheral Blood: Normally NOT present in the peripheral blood but some may be seen in the peripheral blood smears of newborns. 3
Reticulocyte (Polychromatic Erythrocyte, Diffusely Basophilic Erythrocyte)
Notes: the nucleus has now been expelled from the cell, residual RNA gives the cell a polychromatic appearance. The use of supravital stains can help to identify and enumerate Reticulocytes by visualizing reticular inclusions (linear granulation, with a “beads on a string” appearance, see figure below). (Har ch 1 pg 13)
Nucleus-to-Cytoplasm Ratio: N/A 2
Nucleoli: N/A 2
Nucleus: N/A 2
Cytoplasm: 2,3
Light blue-purple to pink (due to residual RNA content and high hemoglobin content)
% in Bone Marrow: 1% 2
% in Peripheral Blood: 0.5-2% 2
Erythrocyte (Discocyte)
Notes: The mature red blood cell is biconcave in shape and lacks ribosomes and mitochondria; therefore, it lacks the ability to synthesize proteins such as hemoglobin and enzymes such as G6PD.1
Nucleus-to-Cytoplasm Ratio: N/A 2
Nucleoli: N/A 2
Nucleus: N/A 2
Cytoplasm: 2-3
Pink-salmon colour with an area of central spanning one-third of the diameter. Cell should contain no inclusions.
% in Bone Marrow: N/A 2
% in Peripheral Blood: Predominant 2
References:
1. Robinson S, Hubbard J. The erythrocyte. In: Clinical laboratory hematology. 3rd ed. New Jersey: Pearson; 2015. p. 59-76.
2. Rodak BF, Carr JH. Erythrocyte maturation. In: Clinical hematology atlas. 5th ed. St. Louis, Missouri: Elsevier Inc.; 2017. p. 17-30
3. Bell A, Harmening DM, Hughes VC. Morphology of human blood and marrow cells. In: Clinical hematology and fundamentals of hemostasis. 5th ed. Philadelphia: F.A. Davis Company; 2009. p. 1-41.