Supporting Cells of the PNS:

1. Schwann cells are the supporting cells of the peripheral nerves. One Schwann cell may envelop segments of several unmyelinated axons or provide a segment of a single myelinated axon with its myelin sheath. Each myelinated axon segment is surrounded by multiple layers of a Schwann cell process with most of its cytoplasm squeezed out; the remaining multilayered Schwann cell plasma membrane, called myelin, consists mainly of phospholipid. The gaps between the myelin sheath Se8ments are the nodes of Ranvier. Ovoid or flattened Schwann cell nuclei lie peripheral to the axon they support. They are usually more euchromatic than the nuclei of the fibrocytes scattered among the axons.
2. Satellite cells are specialized Schwann cells in craniospinal and autonomic ganglia, where they form a one-cell-thick covering over the cell bodies of the neurons (ganglion cells). Their nuclei are spheric with mottled chromatin. In sections, the nuclei typically appear as a "string of pearls" surrounding the much larger ganglion cell bodies.

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