Kupffer cells or Browicz-Kupffer cells are specialized macrophages located in the liver that form part of the reticuloendothelial system (aka: mononuclear phagocyte system). The cells were first observed by Karl Wilhelm von Kupffer in 1876. The scientist called them "sternzellen" (star cells or stellate cells) but thought falsely that they were an integral part of the endothelium of the liver blood vessels and that they originated from it. In 1898, after several years of research, Tadeusz Browicz identified them correctly as macrophages.
Their development begins in the bone marrow with the genesis of promonocytes and monoblasts into monocytes and then on to peripheral blood monocytes completing their differentiation into Kupffer cells.
The primary function of Kupffer cells is to recycle old red blood cells that no longer are functional. The red blood cell is broken down by phagocytic action and the hemoglobin molecule is split. The globin chains are reutilized while the iron containing portion or heme is further broken down into iron which is reutilized and bilirubin, which is conjugated with glucuronic acid within hepatocytes and secreted into the bile.
Helmy et al. identified a receptor present in Kupffer cells, the complement receptor of the immunoglobulin family (CRIg). Mice without CRIg could not clear complement system-coated pathogens. CRIg is conserved in mice and humans and is a critical component of the innate immune system.
See also Macrophage Markers
BGS-18
novel human
Kupffer cell
receptor protein.
CD14
a marker of Kupffer cell activation by LPS.
PMID: 16085180,
PMID: 16045604,
PMID: 12181178,
PMID: 12121871
may play an important role in the activation
of LPS-induced Kupffer cells.
PMID: 14627522
Ethanol administration led to a significant
synthesis of endotoxin receptor CD14 protein and its gene
expression in Kupffer cells (KCs), which maybe result in the
pathological changes of liver tissue and hepatic functional
damages.
PMID: 12632533
expressed on the cell surface of monocytes
and hepatic Kupffer cells, interacts with Gram-positive and
Gram-negative bacteria.
PMID: 12185442
CD68
a marker for Kupffer cells.
PMID: 16534142,
PMID: 7959647
the best marker for Kupffer cells and was
expressed diffusely within the lobules in all groups.
PMID: 15504057
expressed in all liver transplants and normal
livers on the majority of Kupffer cells.
PMID: 12699427
CD68 staining of simple fatty liver and
normal liver showed elongated, spindle-shaped Kupffer cells
diffusely distributed along the sinusoids throughout the
lobules.
PMID: 12118106
ED1
ED1 and ED2 antigens have been particularly
useful in the characterization of Kupffer cell subpopulations.
PMID: 15051326
specific for exudate macrophages.
PMID: 12531686
ED2
Specific Kupffer cell marker.
PMID: 15883743,
PMID: 15964588
recognizing cell
membrane antigens of resident macrophages, including Kupffer
cells, is a
Kupffer cell-membrane
marker.
PMID: 12531686,
PMID: 8327856
a resident Kupffer cell
marker.
PMID: 8225852
F4/80
Resident tissue macrophages, encompassing
Kupffer cells of the liver and red pulp macrophages of the
spleen, characteristically express the F4/80 molecule, a cell
surface glycoprotein related to the seven transmembrane-spanning
family of hormone receptors.
PMID: 12391169
Kupffer cells expressed F4/80.
PMID: 8697146
The antigen is observed on all known
macrophage populations (including Kupffer cells and
bronchoalveolar macrophages) and is absent from any cell types
that are definitely not mononuclear phagocytes.
PMID: 6524692
Fucose Receptor
Kupffer cell lectin, is
a
Kupffer-cell
selective marker.
PMID: 15541921,
PMID: 8619482
functions as the galactose-particle receptor
on the Kupffer cell.
PMID: 8166651
the fucose lectin was shown to be uniquely
present in Kupffer cells and absent in all other types of rat
macrophages examined.
PMID: 3711095
G6PD (glucose-6-phosphate
dehydrogenase)
G6PD activity were clearly visible in the
cytoplasm and on the cytosolic side of the endoplasmic reticulum
of Kupffer cells. Rat Kupffer cells abundantly possessed enzyme-cytochemically
detectable G6PD activity. G6PD enzyme-cytochemistry may be a
useful tool for the study of Kupffer cell functions.
PMID: 12777215
plays an important role in Kupffer cell
function, especially in phagocytosis activity.
PMID: 12376831
Lectin
may be useful markers of Kupffer cells.
PMID: 1333146
Lysozyme
histochemical marker of kupffer cells. PMID: 8603489
Kupffer cell activation marker. PMID: 8542503
lysozyme and esterase-neutral protease activity was either unchanged or increased following infection by increasing numbers of nocardial cells. PMID: 3536752
In the liver of both animals (porcine and bovine), Kupffer cells were positive for lysozyme, and cytoplasmic vacuoles in Ito cells were small. PMID: 17675812
TNF-α
a
marker of
Kupffer cell
activation.
PMID: 12559181,
PMID: 12105857,
PMID: 11476962