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Jeremy S. Duffield, Kwon Moo Park, Li-Li Hsiao, Vicki R. Kelley, David T. Scadden, Takaharu Ichimura, Joseph V. Bonventre
Published in Volume 115, Issue 7
J Clin Invest. 2005; 115(7):1743–1755 doi:10.1172/JCI22593
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Figure 5

In female mice with male bone marrow, tubular cells are not derived from bone marrow cells following I/R injury to the kidney. (A) Fluorescent image of kidney outer medulla at day 15 following bilateral ischemic injury. The section was hybridized with an FITC-conjugated probe for the Y chromosome and counterstained with lotus lectin (red) highlighting proximal tubular cells and DAPI showing nuclei. Note that many interstitial cells (arrowheads) exhibit the Y chromosome, but none of the regenerated tubular cells stain for the Y chromosome. (B) Section of spleen showing that the majority of nuclei stain positively for the Y chromosome. (C) Detailed view of a proximal tubule, showing a tubular cell nucleus apparently containing a Y chromosome when viewed by epifluorescence. (D) An ultrathin deconvolution image through the same section as shown in C. The fluorescent label can be clearly seen to reside outside of the nucleus. (E and F) Sections hybridized with FITC-conjugated Y chromosome probe were counterstained with anti-vWF antibodies (red). (E) Peritubular capillary showing endothelial cell nucleus with Y chromosome. (F) Section of the image in E obtained by deconvolution microscopy confirming vWF staining and a nucleus containing the Y chromosome all in 1 plane. Scale bars: 50 μm.