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Kiyoshi Mori, H. Thomas Lee, Dana Rapoport, Ian R. Drexler, Kirk Foster, Jun Yang, Kai M. Schmidt-Ott, Xia Chen, Jau Yi Li, Stacey Weiss, Jaya Mishra, Faisal H. Cheema, Glenn Markowitz, Takayoshi Suganami, Kazutomo Sawai, Masashi Mukoyama, Cheryl Kunis, Vivette D’Agati, Prasad Devarajan, Jonathan Barasch
Published in Volume 115, Issue 3
J Clin Invest. 2005; 115(3):610–621 doi:10.1172/JCI23056
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Figure 2

Ngal is expressed in cortical tubules in human acute renal failure. Ngal was detected with affinity-purified polyclonal antibody. (A) The normal kidney had little staining for Ngal. (B and C) At high power, focal staining of distal tubule cells (occupying 10% of the cortical area) and collecting ducts was found. There was no staining of proximal tubules. (DI) Ischemic ATN caused by sepsis (D), by hypovolemia due to vomiting and diarrhea (E), or by heart failure (F), or nephrotoxic ATN caused by bisphosphonate (G), by cephalosporin (H), or by hemoglobinuria (I), produced intense staining of nearly 50% of the cortical tubules. Staining was heterogeneous and most intense in epithelial cells that displayed histologic features of cell injury, including simplification and enlarged reparative nuclei and prominent nucleoli. (J and K) In glomerular disease, Ngal was weakly expressed by crescents (J) and the proximal tubules of nephrosis (K). Scale bars: A, D, G, and K, 11 μm; B, C, E, F, and HJ, 5 μm.