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Immunohistochemical analyses of the kinetics and distribution of macrophages in the developing rat kidney.

Macrophages are required during kidney development and appear in the initiation and propagation of renal injury. To establish baseline data, we analyzed the kinetics of the macrophage with different immunophenotypes in the developing rat kidney (fetus at 18 and 20 days, neonate at 1-21 days, and adult at 7-weeks old). Macrophages reacting to CD68, CD163, and MHC class II were identified in the cortex and medulla of the developing rat kidney. CD68+ macrophages appeared in the fetal kidney as early as fetal day 18, and the number increased gradually in the neonatal kidney, whereas MHC class II+ and CD163+ macrophages first appeared on neonatal days 4 and 8, respectively. Apoptotic bodies were seen in the fetal kidney and early stages of the neonatal kidney (days 1-4), and simultaneously CD68+ macrophages appeared, indicating that CD68+ macrophages may have roles in phagocytosis of apoptotic bodies and contribute to renal tissue maturation. Colony stimulating factor 1 and insulin growth factor 1 mRNAs were increased in the late stage of renal development (neonatal day 12 or later), and simultaneously CD163+ and MHC class II+ cells appeared, suggesting that these cells may be a source of these growth factors and participate in renal tissue modeling. Generally, the CD163+ and MHC class II+ cell number was much smaller than that of CD68+ cells in the developing neonatal kidney. Therefore, the obtained findings provide valuable information on the participation of macrophages in the developing rat kidney. This information may be useful for evaluation of renal toxicity when macrophages are involved in the development of renal injury.

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