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      Call for Papers: Green Renal Replacement Therapy: Caring for the Environment

      Submit here before July 31, 2024

      About Blood Purification: 3.0 Impact Factor I 5.6 CiteScore I 0.83 Scimago Journal & Country Rank (SJR)

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      Cytopathological changes induced by cadmium-exposure in canine proximal tubular cells: a cytochemical and ultrastructural study.

      Nephron. Physiology
      Animals, Cadmium, analysis, pharmacokinetics, toxicity, Cell Death, drug effects, Cells, Cultured, Dogs, Epithelium, chemistry, ultrastructure, Fluorescence, Histocytochemistry, Kidney Tubules, Proximal, Microscopy, Electron, Oxyquinoline, Sensitivity and Specificity, Subcellular Fractions, metabolism

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          Abstract

          A highly sensitive cytochemical method for demonstrating intracellular Cd using 8-hydroxyquinoline was developed and applied in the cytopathological study of primary-cultured renal tubular cells from beagle kidneys. The Cd-8-hydroxyquinoline emitted a yellowish-green fluorescence which first appeared in the cytoplasm within 30 min and in the nucleus about 60-90 min after exposure to 100 mM CdCl2. It was noteworthy that intranuclear Cd was stained in the nucleolar regions. The sensitivity of the cytochemical method for Cd was estimated to be about 1.0 pg Cd/cell. Ultrastructural features of the dead cells were consistent with those of apoptosis. We conclude that Cd absorbed by proximal tubular cells rapidly reaches to the nuclei and affects nuclear as well as cytoplasmic metabolism.

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