Case Report
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World J Gastroenterol. Feb 14, 2006; 12(6): 987-989
Published online Feb 14, 2006. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v12.i6.987
Ultrastructure of Kupffer cells and hepatocytes in the Dubin-Johnson syndrome: A case report
Maria Elzbieta Sobaniec-Lotowska, Dariusz Marek Lebensztejn
Maria Elzbieta Sobaniec-Lotowska, Department of Clinical Pathomorphology, Medical University of Bialystok, Poland
Dariusz Marek Lebensztejn, 3rd Department of Pediatrics, Medical University of Bialystok, Poland
Correspondence to: Professor Maria E Sobaniec-Lotowska, Department of Clinical Pathomorphology, Medical University, Waszyngtona 13 Street, Bialystok 15-269, Poland. mariasl@zeus.amb.edu.pl
Telephone: +48-85-7485940 Fax: +48-85-7485990
Received: August 10, 2005
Revised: August 15, 2005
Accepted: August 26, 2005
Published online: February 14, 2006
Abstract

Ultrastructure of Kupffer cells and hepatocytes in liver bioptate was evaluated in a 17-year-old boy with Dubin–Johnson syndrome (DJS). The liver tissue obtained by needle biopsy was fixed in glutaraldehyde and paraformaldehyde and routinely processed for electron microscopic analysis. The ultrastructural examinations of liver bioptate revealed the accumulation of membrane-bound, electron-dense lysosomal granules within the cytoplasm of hepatocytes, characteristic of DJS. They were located mainly in the vicinity of the biliary pole, and preferentially in the centrilobular region that corresponded to the pigment deposits seen under light microscope. The presence of the granules was accompanied by dilated elements of the granular endoplasmic reticulum and paracrystalline mitochondrial inclusions as well as dilation of the bile canaliculi. The changes in hepatocytes co-existed with marked stimulation and enhanced phagocytic activity of Kupffer cells. This was manifested in the accumulation of pigment deposits within their cytoplasm that corresponded to those observed in hepatocytes. Hyperactive pericentral Kupffer cells which are involved in the response to pigmentary material originating from disintegrated hepatocytes may play an essential role in the development of DJS.

Keywords: Liver biopsy; Electron microscopic study; Lysosomal granules; Functional hyperbilirubinemia; Dubin–Johnson syndrome