The first mention of epithelioid cells as a specific cell form occurred in the 19th century in the works of
Robert Koch and
Victor André Cornil, who believed the
leukocytes to be the originators of the epithelioid cells of tuberculosis. In experiments on rabbits,
Alexandre Yersin (1888) and
Amédée Borrel (1893) showed that epithelioid cells are formed from blood mononuclear leukocytes. The main patterns of epithelioid cell formation were first described in the first half of the 20th century by Lewis M. (1925). This researcher showed that blood
monocytes in
cell cultures of mixed blood leukocytes of Avian (taken from adult fowl as well as from embryos of various ages), mice, and humans, when cultured
in vitro, are transformed into typical macrophages and epithelioid cells, followed by the formation of giant multinucleated cells. The formation of epithelioid-type cells was noted by Lewis M. on the 2nd–3rd day of the cultivation of leukocytes. Later in a study of a similar plan, Jerry S. and Weiss L. (1966), when using cultures of mixed blood leukocytes of chicken (separated from cardiac blood of Rhode Island Red) and electron microscopy, showed that the transformation of monocytes of chicken in epithelioid cells begins in culture on 3–4 days and ends on 5–6 days. Rhee et al. (1979), in experiments on rats using the method of electron microscopy, showed that one of the main cytomorphological features of epithelioid cells that distinguish these cells from macrophages is the presence of characteristically specific granules in them, which they called epithelioid cell granules. Based on their own data, they supported the concept of epithelioid cell cytomorphogenesis, according to which epithelioid cells are regarded as a derivative of activated macrophages. However, not all the results of research devoted to the study of the laws and mechanisms of cytomorphogenesis of epithelioid cells fit into the concept of the origin of epithelioid cells from macrophages. Deimann J. and Fahimi H. (1980) showed that epithelioid cells in granulomas, induced in the rat liver by injection of glucan, beta-1,30-polyglucose, are formed not from
Kupffer cells, mature
differentiated macrophages, but from blood monocytes. De Vos et al. (1990) obtained the data that allowed them to suggest that in granulomatous inflammation foci and granulomatous
lymphadenitis, epithelioid cells are formed not from differentiated macrophages but from so-called
plasmacytoid monocytes (which have similarities with plasmacytes). This is further supported by the ultrastructural similarities between plasmacytoid monocytes and epithelioid cells. The present ultrastructural and immunoelectron microscopic study of epithelioid cell granulomas provides further arguments in favor of this hypothesis. Arkhipov S. (1997, 2012), using cultures of peritoneal cells, blood leukocytes, and bone
marrow cells of mice, showed that macrophages and epithelioid cells are formed from different types of monocytes. It has been shown that epithelioid cells are formed only from plasmocytoid-type monocytes and have been named pre-epithelioid cells, bypassing the stage of
differentiation into macrophages. It has been shown that in chronic inflammation, the number of pre-epithelioid monocytic cells committed to epithelioid cell differentiation increases in the focus of inflammation in the blood and bone marrow. Using mouse
inbred lines, as opposed to susceptibility to
Mycobacterium tuberculosis, it was shown that the numbers of pre-epithelioid monocytic cells, formed in chronic inflammation, are genetically determined. The obtained results showed that the morphogenesis of epithelioid cell granulomas can be determined by the different starting
genetically determined levels of a pool of pre-epithelioid cells of monocytoid type, their flow in the center of granulomatous inflammation, the intensity of their differentiation into epithelioid cells, bypassing the stage of differentiation into macrophages, and their
endomitotic activity. == See also ==