55 Granulocytes and Granulocyte Maturation
Michelle To and Valentin Villatoro
Myeloblast/Blast
Notes: Earliest distinguishable and recognizable stage of granulocyte maturation.1
Nucleus-to-Cytoplasm Ratio: 4:1 2
Nucleoli: 1-51
Nucleus:1,3
Round to oval
Central or eccentrically located
Loose, open, evenly stained, reddish-purple, chromatin
Cytoplasm:1,2
Dark to light basophilia
May contain granules (up to 20)
Golgi may be seen (pale area next to the nucleus)
Normal % in Bone Marrow: 0-2%2
Normal % in Peripheral Blood: 0%2
Promyelocyte
Notes: Presence of primary granules marks maturation at the promyelocyte stage.3
Nucleus-to-Cytoplasm Ratio: 3:1 2
Nucleoli: 1-32
Nucleus:1-3
Round to oval
Central or eccentrically located
Reddish-blue chromatin
Fine and slightly coarser chromatin than a myeloblast
Cytoplasm:2
Lightly basophilic
Primary (fine, nonspecific) granules present (reddish-purple)
Normal % in Bone Marrow: 2-5%2
Normal % in Peripheral Blood: 0% 2
Myelocyte
Notes: Presence of secondary granules marks maturation at the myelocyte stage. Primary granules may still be seen but decrease in number as the cell matures. Secondary granules become more predominant as the cell mature and are considered specific to a granulocytic lineage.1
The myelocyte is the last stage where the cell is able to undergo mitosis.1
Nucleus-to-Cytoplasm Ratio: 2:1 2
Nucleoli: Usually not visible2
Nucleus:2,3
Round to oval
Eccentrically located
Reddish-purple, slightly clumped chromatin
Cytoplasm:2-5
Primary granules may be present in small amounts (Decrease in number as the cell matures).
Secondary (coarse, specific) granules present (Increase in number as the cell matures).
Granulocyte |
Cytoplasm Colour |
Secondary (Coarse, Specific) Granule Colour |
Neutrophil |
pink-tan |
azurophilic (reddish-purple) |
Eosinophil |
cream coloured to colourless |
eosinophilic (Pale to dark orange) |
Basophil |
pale blue |
basophilic (dark purple-black) |
Normal % in the Bone Marrow and Peripheral Blood:2,4,5
Granulocyte |
% In Bone Marrow |
% In Peripheral Blood |
Neutrophil |
5-19% |
0% |
Eosinophil |
0-2% |
0% |
Basophil |
0-1% |
N/A |
Metamyelocyte
Notes: Cell is no longer capable of mitosis at this stage. Characteristic feature of a metamyelocyte is the indented nucleus shape (nucleus looks as if it was lightly poked).1
Nucleus-to-Cytoplasm Ratio: 1.5:12
Nucleoli: Not visible2
Nucleus:1-3
Indented (kidney bean shaped); indent is less than one-third of the diameter of the hypothetical round nucleus
Eccentrically located
Dark purple, coarse, clumped chromatin
Cytoplasm:2-5
Granulocyte |
Cytoplasm Colour |
Secondary (Coarse, Specific) Granule Colour |
Neutrophil |
pink-tan |
azurophilic (reddish-purple) |
Eosinophil |
cream coloured to colourless |
eosinophilic (Pale to dark orange) |
Basophil |
pale blue |
basophilic (dark purple-black) |
Normal % in the Bone Marrow and Peripheral Blood:2-5
Granulocyte |
% In Bone Marrow |
% In Peripheral Blood |
Neutrophil |
3-22% |
0% |
Eosinophil |
0-2% |
0% |
Basophil |
0-1% |
N/A |
Band
Notes: Stage shows a nucleus with a larger indentation than a metamyelocyte but it still considered non-segmented.1
Nucleus-to-Cytoplasm Ratio: Cytoplasm predominates 2
Nucleoli: Not visible2
Nucleus:1,3
Indentation takes up more than one-third of the diameter of the hypothetical round nucleus.
Appears C, U, or S shaped
Centrally or eccentrically located
Dark purple, coarse, clumped chromatin
Cytoplasm:2-5
Granulocyte |
Cytoplasm Colour |
Secondary (Coarse, Specific) Granule Colour |
Neutrophil |
pink-tan |
azurophilic (reddish-purple) |
Eosinophil |
cream coloured to colourless |
eosinophilic (Pale to dark orange) |
Basophil |
pale blue |
basophilic (dark purple-black) |
Normal % in the Bone Marrow and Peripheral Blood:2,4,5
Granulocyte |
% In Bone Marrow |
% In Peripheral Blood |
Neutrophil |
7-33% |
0-5% |
Eosinophil |
0-2% |
Rare |
Basophil |
0-1% |
N/A |
Mature (Segmented) Granulocyte
Nucleus-to-Cytoplasm Ratio: Cytoplasm predominates
Nucleoli: Not visible2
Nucleus:1-5
Centrally or eccentrically located
Coarse, clumpy, dark purple staining chromatin
Nucleus is separated into lobes which are all connected by chromatin filaments:
Granulocyte |
Normal Number of Segmented Lobes |
Neutrophil |
2-5 |
Eosinophil |
2-3 |
Basophiil |
Usually 2, often obscured by granules |
Cytoplasm:2,4,5
Granulocyte |
Cytoplasm Colour |
Secondary (Coarse, Specific) Granule Colour |
Neutrophil |
pink-tan |
azurophilic (reddish-purple) |
Eosinophil |
cream coloured to colourless |
eosinophilic (Pale to dark orange) |
Basophil |
pale blue |
basophilic (dark purple-black), often obscure the nucleus |
Normal % in the Bone Marrow and Peripheral Blood:2,4,5
Granulocyte |
% In Bone Marrow |
% In Peripheral Blood |
Neutrophil |
3-11% |
50-70% |
Eosinophil |
0-3% |
0-5% |
Basophil |
<1% |
0-1% |
References:
1. Landis-Piwowar K. Granulocytes and Monocytes. In: Clinical laboratory hematology. 3rd ed. New Jersey: Pearson; 2015. p. 97-121.
2. Rodak BF, Carr JH. Neutrophil maturation. In: Clinical hematology atlas. 5th ed. St. Louis, Missouri: Elsevier Inc.; 2017. p. 41-54.
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.
4. Rodak BF, Carr JH. Eosinophil maturation. In: Clinical hematology atlas. 5th ed. St. Louis, Missouri: Elsevier Inc.; 2017. p. 65-74.
5. Rodak BF, Carr JH. Basophil maturation. In: Clinical hematology atlas. 5th ed. St. Louis, Missouri: Elsevier Inc.; 2017. p. 75-8.