Honorific Prefix: | Ritter |
Karl Wilhelm von Kupffer | |
Birth Name: | Karl Wilhelm Kupffer |
Birth Place: | Lesten, Kreis Tuckum, Courland Governorate, Russian Empire (present-day Lestene, Tukums municipality, Latvia) |
Nationality: | Baltic German |
Death Place: | Munich, Kingdom of Bavaria, German Empire |
Field: | physiology and anatomy |
Work Institution: | Christian Albrecht University of Kiel Albert University of Königsberg |
Alma Mater: | Imperial University of Dorpat |
Doctoral Advisor: | Emil Du Bois-Reymond Johannes Peter Müller Friedrich Bidder |
Karl Wilhelm Ritter von Kupffer (born Karl Wilhelm Kupffer; – 16 December 1902) was a Baltic German anatomist who discovered stellate macrophage cells that bear his name.
He was the eldest son of pastor Karl Hermann Kupffer (1797–1860). In 1854, he obtained his medical doctorate from the University of Dorpat, where shortly afterwards he served as an assistant to Friedrich Heinrich Bidder (1810–1894). In 1856–1857 he took a scientific journey to Vienna, Berlin and Göttingen, an extended trip in which he studied physiology with Emil Du Bois-Reymond (1818–1896) and Johannes Peter Müller (1801–1858). Afterwards, he returned to Dorpat, where he later became an associate professor.
In 1866 he was appointed chair of anatomy at the University of Kiel, and several years later relocated to Königsberg (1875) as a professor of anatomy. From 1880 until his retirement in 1901, Kupffer held the chair of anatomy at the University of Munich.
Kupffer is largely known for his work in the fields of neuroanatomy and embryology. He conducted studies on the development of the brain, spleen, pancreas and kidneys, also performing research involving innervation of exocrine gland and doing investigations on early differentiation of mesoderm. While Bidder's assistant at Dorpat, he studied structures of the central nervous system, and during his tenure at Königsberg, he had the opportunity to examine the cranium of philosopher Immanuel Kant.[1]
In regards to his discovery of "Kupffer cells" in 1876, he initially suggested that this type of cell belonged to a group of perivascular cells (pericytes) of the connective tissues or to the adventitial cells. Two decades later (1898), he revised his earlier analysis, stating that the cells form an essential component of the vascular walls and correlate to the specific cells of endothelium, capable of phagocytising foreign materials.[2] Shortly afterwards, pathologist Tadeusz Browicz (1847-1928) from Jagellonian University in Kraków, correctly identified them as macrophages.