
Disclaimer: This is a fictional, metaphorical story only meant to depict biological functions.
Within the sprawling ecosystem of an academic city, a biotechnology “embryo” naturally formed. A collection of scholarly cells gathered together creating an inner cell mass poised to bring life to the community outside. Protected by an institutional uterus, the new blastocyst gave rise to pluripotent stem cells (aka individuals not yet tied to one state). This spurred on the differentiation of various organs, eventually forming into a fully fledged educational body.
While the collegiate brain of this intellectual system continued to establish neural connections and grow; deep within the bone marrow of the pelvic region, a rare sentinel cell began to develop. This precursor, a hemocytoblast, quietly matured into a monocyte. Classified as a white blood cell (technically a type of leukocyte), its role is to help fight infections and regulate immunological responses. It migrates through the bloodstream in search of imbalance, injustice, and/or infection within the academic environment.

This adaptive scout is prepared with antigen-presenting capabilities and is also highly metabolically aware. It is able to cross many boundaries due to its flexibility and ability to squeeze through small spaces (a process called diapedesis). Sensitive to pattern distortion, unethical foldings of institutional proteins will always trigger messages to the greater immune network no matter where they are found.
Just as the monocyte started to get familiar with the bone marrow around it, organizational restructuring signaled an upcoming change. Movements from student learning hubs into a legitimate scientific networks were flaring up a storm within the Central Nervous System. This prompted the unique leukocyte to travel a great biological distance to ensure that the cerebral cortex was in working order despite some internal struggles.
The journey to the brain was long and scenic. Like any epic traveling experience, overcoming obstacles is just part of the adventure. Along with its neutrophil companion, the semi-nomadic duo cruised along the circulatory highway of the bloodstream. There were many moments of unimaginable bliss crossed with deep feelings of being lost and uncertain if these paths were leading in the right direction. Yet, they passed through endothelial barrier checkpoints, scouted peripheral organs, and pressed through any deserted dead zones encountered (leaving notes and symbols for other explorers that might find their way there). Eventually, they both found shelter in the meningeal layers near the brainstem ready to learn more about biotechnology thought patterns speeding through the neurons. Despite the fairly healthy stem cell derived structure, some signals were irregularly firing off. The monocyte’s compass was correct to lead it here, but they needed to find security fast.
With wild Glycocalyx “dreads,” the sentinel cell found itself surrounded by young adult stem cells looking for direction and purpose. Some were pluripotent, others multipotent, and only a few were mature differentiated teachers. This group collected together in the Subventricular Zone of a Science Village hoping to establish clearer identities that will better assist the larger academically inclined research body.
Unlike others who migrated inward towards the Central Doctrine Pathways, this monocyte cell stayed true to itself, knowing that exploring certain zones could put a target on its back. Unfortunately, one stem cell hit the monocyte with a rolled up extracellular matrix (ECM) scaffold spurred on by deep-seeded insecurities. No offense taken. They both just needed to find their place. Other cells saw that the sentinel was not yet tied to the brain directly and were unsure whether or not to give it the respect it deserved as an immunological responder. Occasional signals of appreciation for notifying fellow cells of potential future danger were broadcast. The rockstars of the group nodded their heads with approval, letting the first responder know that they saw its strong communication abilities. Still, this monocyte knew that these cells were headed towards a path that it didn’t want to go (at least not yet).
Even though there were definite inflammation flares, the brain seemed stable enough at this point. This brief moment of stability allowed for transformation. The cell’s wild Glycocalyx dreads temporarily changed into clean braids, showcasing that appearance and action are intertwined. Forget the judgement; it was time to head out briefly into the next organ with integrity in-tact.
After resting, the sentinel was finally tasked with immunological and protective research tasks by the brain. Proper transcriptional signatures were logged, and the job was secured. But just as the monocyte started to settle in, the liver started calling for some reason. A spin-off cluster of cells, originating from hepatocytic tissues, had begun operating under the guise of detoxification; labeling itself as liver-like. Yet it failed to fully disclose its origin or regulatory oversight, raising concerns about metabolic transparency and systemic health.
Potentially neoplastic in behavior, this opportunistic mass welcomed the sentinel in; not as a threat, but as a tool. Initially, cytokines and chemokines produced by the monocyte were allowed to occur. These signaling molecules directed nearby adolescent cells how to run experiments. This included teaching what it means to create healthy microenvironments despite the external one not being structurally sound.
Perhaps the motivation for bringing in the monocyte wasn’t meant as a trap at first, but rather it was to reprogram the immune cell’s core functions. It started by co-opting the immune cell’s legitimacy to show the new clonal cells how to produce results that would benefit the mass. This would accelerate the self-preservation and unchecked growth. The sentinel was originally primed for immune surveillance and systemic balance, however. It found itself pressured to train others not in critical inquiry, but in productivity optimized for appearances. This tension created friction. The leader of clonal cells wanted secrecy, but the monocyte’s very nature was to detect imbalance. So each cytokine highlighted irregularities and even resentment. Thus the integrity of the wider organism was no longer the priority: only the expansion of the aberrant tissue. The liver had to choose a side: trust the tissue that it had been conditioned to support, or listen to the now misclassified monocyte.
Over previous years, the liver was probably excited about a new educational filtering system so that it could help spark generational expansion of knowledge. However, clear conflicts of interest and corner cutting popped up. Why the issues were swept under the rug remains unclear. Still, during the time the monocyte was present, the sentinel persevered and continued to bring to light the problems at hand. The facade was starting to crack and it was just a matter of time before something had to change.
Bacterial contamination started to seeped in, putting both the new ectopic cluster, the established organ, and even the sentinel at risk. Excess metabolites (growth media) lingered in the parenchyma, which were left out for months instead of being stored properly. The liver was attempting detoxification through a half-finished pass of its enzymatic machinery, like spraying IPA on a BSL1 bench but without actually wiping it down. Without a second stage to neutralize the intermediates, reactive remnants built up instead of being fully removed. Despite the controlling mindset, microbes found their way in regardless, fermenting in the excess and flourishing where balance should have been maintained. Perhaps it was the fault of inexperienced cells fumbling their training, or maybe it was the result of poor oversight from above. In the end, it didn’t matter: the filters were missing and the resources were compromised. So no matter what, it looked like a losing battle from the monocyte’s perspective.
As inflammatory cytokines spilled into the bloodstream, alerts of disfunction began circulating systemically. Some carried enough signal strength to reach distant organs, including the Central Nervous System. The sentinel recognized that these could weaken the normally protective blood-brain and spinal cord barriers. If breached, inflammation could infiltrate neural tissues. This could result in electrical impulse misfiring, fatigue in the cerebral cortex, or even disruptions in coordination. These flares could escalate into full-blown neuroinflammation.

To stop the immune response, the leader of the clonal cells lured the monocyte closer with promises of a good future dictated by its own selfish direction. Strong immune signals like GM-CSF and IL-4 were being released by resident Kupffer cells and T helper 2 (Th2) cells within the liver though. This gave the monocyte enough of a chance to differentiate into a dendrite.
However, under duress, the protective layer of a “lab coat” was stripped away within the liver’s tissues in order to adapt while contamination was occurring. This represented the “plan cost” for the monocyte. The tradeoff it faced was all about plasticity vs. specialization. Biologically, genes were being upregulated and transcription kicked in to establish a stronger identity because differentiation was actually happening. Yet, right at the crux of change, the environment was flooded with confidentiality cytokines such as IL-10 and TGF-β.
“You were supposed to help us out in the exact ways we wanted you to, not what your DNA was coded for. Get out of this organ, and don’t tell the other organs what we are doing here!”
They didn’t necessarily label the sentinel for apoptosis and there was an air of kindness in a way. But instead of transparency on why the decision was made, a Tryptophan supplement was provided as a sort of “we want you to survive but not to thrive.” The monocyte gave back access to the liver’s outer layer without a second thought. There was no begging to stay, no confusion: just a request for accountability on the tumor’s side.
Still, to try to maintain control and establish a one-sided narrative, the emergent cell of origin asked the monocyte if it was ok to send a twisted PR signal to keep appearances. Fuck no! They did not have consent to use the monocyte’s exodus for personal gain. He stood up from the endoplasmic reticulum, and told them directly that that communication was not true. But it acknowledged that the cell mass was going to say whatever they wanted to smooth things over. No matter what though, parents of the adolescent cells learning within the liver’s tissues will no doubt wonder what exactly happened. They have to side with the mass no matter what though. They paid all that adenosine triphosphate anyways. Regardless, kicking out the monocyte undermined organization trust for every living entity involved. And those types of ripples don’t just evaporate; they turn into waves that will most certainly produce biological, structural, and environmental change.
The sentinel cell had indeed detected internal cytokines suggestive of uncheck liver inflammation. Like smoke escaping from a hidden fire, systemic toxins flooded the bloodstream. It was subtle at first, then persistent. These inflammatory signals, long ignored by surrounding tissues, could eventually breach the blood-brain and spinal cord barriers, corrupting what should have been immune privilege. If left to its own devices, a neuroinflammatory response could be triggered by the liver’s failure to regulate its own signals. Those cytokines that were in the bloodstream could cascade into early-stage Scholar’s Myelitis.
From a outsider’s perspective, this may not be a well known disease, but its symptoms have been seen for millennia. It is just being given a name now within Doctor circles. Those unfamiliar can consider it a neuroinflammatory condition where academic tissue attacks its own intellectual diversity under the guise of optimization. In this instance, inflammation most likely subsided. The monocyte fled as fast as it could away from the damaged organ though, while still staying safe in the exiting process. So the exact state of the liver is uncertain.
However, at this point, the risk of Scholar’s Myelitis seems to be under control. But underneath the surface, the sentinel cell had already released nano-antigen vesicles into the interstitial fluid. Fragments of signals encoded with the original divergence: proof of imbalance, of coercion, and of blocked pathways. Larger immune system regulatory oversight may happen. Hopefully, clearing out of any embedded toxins and contaminants will occur. But for the monocyte, its journey back to safety and security has already begun. The protective “lab coat” is already on its way through the proper messaging channels; although it was probably sent as a decoy signal or a way to cover the emergent liver-related tissue’s back. Still, peace and healing are around the corner even if more pain occurs first. Overall stability will happen and can be counted on! This struggle showed that when times are tough, the immunological first responders are always there to help protect the system. That’s how healthy infrastructures remain in place, and it takes many of them to work. Individually, the monocytes sometimes get the rough end of the stick. But in the end, it is worth it for the body as a whole.













































