Quantitation, tissue distribution and proliferation kinetics of kupffer cells in normal rat liver
โ Scribed by Luc Bouwens; Marijke Baekeland; Ronald de Zanger; Eddie Wisse
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1986
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 667 KB
- Volume
- 6
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0270-9139
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
In normal rat liver, Kupffer cells were unequivocally identified using peroxidase cytochemistry by light microscopy in semithin plastic sections. The Kupffer cell population was found to constitute 31% of the sinusoidal cells and by morphometry and serial sectioning, a mean absolute number of 14 to 20 % lo6 Kupffer cells per g liver was calculated. The mean distribution of Kupffer cells in the liver lobules was 43% in the periportal, 28% in the midzonal and 29% in the central area of the lobule. Administration of latex particles labeled only 64% of all Kupffer cells, and in particular centrally located cells, showed a lower activity of latex uptake, even at overloading doses. Furthermore, the latter cells were of smaller size than periportal Kupffer cell profiles.
The mean number and distribution of latex-labeled Kupffer cells did not change over a period of 3 months, indicating a long lifetime for these resident macrophages. This slow population turnover was supported by the observed small mitotic index, 0.06% after a 6 hr arrest by vinblastine, and by the small ['Hlthymidine labeling index which did not change over a period of 3 weeks after administration of the label. It is proposed that the Kupffer cell population, under physiologic conditions, is a long-living and self-renewing population, the kinetics of which substantially differ from those of other sinumidal cell types.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Previous research with pentoxifylline (n), a methylxanthine phosphodiesterase inhibitor, suggests that this drug may be capable of suppressing the activation of Kupffer cells and thereby help decrease liver injury after transplantation. To investigate this possibility, the current study sought to de
## Abstract The distribution of Concanavalin A receptors in cultures of normal rat liver cells and of Zajdela ascites hepatoma cells of the rat was investigated by the Con Aโpo technique (Bernhard and Avrameas, 1971). Con Aโpo labelling of the cell surface showed a patchy distribution of Concanaval
Pit cells are a unique population of cells in sinusoids and peripheral blood, which can be considered natural killer (NK) cells with large granular lymphocyte (LGL) morphology. The aim of this study was to investigate the use of the monoclonal antibody (MAb) 3.2.3 as a specific marker of rat pit cel