Telocytes in the Normal and Pathological Peripheral Nervous System
Date
2020Abstract
We studied telocytes/CD34+ stromal cells in the normal and pathological peripheral
nervous system (PNS), for which we reviewed the literature and contributed our observations
under light and electron microscopy in this field. We consider the following aspects: (A) general
characteristics of telocytes and the terminology used for these cells (e.g., endoneurial stromal cells)
in PNS; (B) the presence, characteristics and arrangement of telocytes in the normal PNS, including
(i) nerve epi-perineurium and endoneurium (e.g., telopodes extending into the endoneurial space);
(ii) sensory nerve endings (e.g., Meissner and Pacinian corpuscles, and neuromuscular spindles);
(iii) ganglia; and (iv) the intestinal autonomic nervous system; (C) the telocytes in the pathologic PNS,
encompassing (i) hyperplastic neurogenic processes (neurogenic hyperplasia of the appendix and
gallbladder), highly demonstrative of telocyte characteristics and relations, (ii) PNS tumours, such as
neurofibroma, schwannoma, granular cell tumour and nerve sheath myxoma, and interstitial cell of
Cajal-related gastrointestinal stromal tumour (GIST), (iii) tumour-invaded nerves and (iv) traumatic,
metabolic, degenerative or genetic neuropathies, in which there are fewer studies on telocytes, e.g.,
neuroinflammation and nerves in undescended testicles (cryptorchidism), Klinefelter syndrome,
crush injury, mucopolysaccharidosis II (Hunter’s syndrome) and Charcot–Marie–Tooth disease