A study on the Kupffer cells (KCs) of Amphibia was undertaken in order to compare these cells with those
of endothermic animals. Liver tissue and isolated and cultured KCs were studied by light microscopy and by
transmission and scanning electron microscopy. We have shown that amphibian KCs can be divided into 2
principal types: ‘small’ and ‘large’. Both cell types possess the distinctive KC morphology. They show
nonspecific esterase activity, weak endogenous peroxidase activity in the nuclear envelope and in the rough
endoplasmic reticulum, and the ability to engulf naturally present cell debris or experimentally administered
zymosan or latex particles. The principal difference between the small and the large cells consists in the
substantial quantity of inclusion bodies that exist only in the latter. We conclude that amphibian KCs, apart
from their ability to build melanosomes and synthesise melanins, are very similar to mammalian KCs.