Abstract

The distribution of carbonic anhydrase in the kidney of the cynomolgus monkey was studied by the histochemical method of Hansson. Glomeruli and Bowman's capsule were inactive. Convoluted proximal tubules showed high enzyme activity at the brush border and the basolateral membranes and the cytoplasm. Straight proximal tubules were less intensely stained. In nephrons with long loops of Henle, the descending thin limb contained weak enzyme activity, whereas the ascending thin limb was inactive. The thick limb of Henle's loop displayed most enzyme activity at the luminal cell border. In distal convoluted tubules enzyme activity was restricted to the basal part of the cells. In the late distal tubule, intercalated cells appeared among the "ordinary" distal cells and contained abundant cytoplasmic enzyme. Many intensely stained intercalated cells were also found in the cortical and outer medullary segments of the collecting duct, intermingled with more weakly stained chief cells. In the inner medullary segment of the collecting duct, enzyme activity gradually disappeared. Many capillaries were clearly stained for enzyme activity. The capillary staining apparently varied with that of the kidney tubules; virtually all capillaries in the cortex, but very few in the inner medulla, were stained. The distribution of carbonic anhydrase in the kidney tubules of the monkey is very similar to that in man and in the rat, but the primate kidney differs from the rat kidney by the presence of capillary enzyme activity. The functional importance of this difference is not clear at present.

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