Abstract

We describe and characterize unilateral renal aplasia in a cynomolgus monkey (Macaca fascicularis) from a chronic toxicology study adding to the limited histopathology reports of congenital renal anomalies in macaques. In the current case, the affected kidney was macroscopically small and characterized microscopically by a thin cortex with an underdeveloped medulla and an absent papilla. The remnant medulla lacked a corticomedullary junction and contained only a few irregular collecting duct-like structures. The cortex had extensive interstitial mature collagen deposition with fibromuscular collar formation around Bowman's capsules. Due to parenchymal collapse, mature glomeruli were condensed together with occasional atrophic and sclerotic glomeruli. The majority of the cortical tubules were poorly differentiated with only small islands of fully developed cortical tubules present. Histochemical and immunohistochemical stains were utilized to demonstrate key diagnostic features of this congenital defect, to assist with differentiating it from renal dysplasia, and to provide potential mechanistic pathways. Immunostaining (S100, paired box gene 2 [PAX2], aquaporins) of the medulla was compatible with incomplete maturation associated with aplasia, while the immunostaining profile for the cortex (vimentin, calbindin, PAX2-positive cortical tubules, and smooth muscle actin-positive fibromuscular collars) was most compatible with dedifferentiation secondary to degenerative changes.

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