Abstract
The macrophagic amoeboid microglial cells in the corpus callosum of postnatal rats were labelled following an intravenous injection of horseradish peroxidase (HRP). The earliest time when these cells were labelled was 3 h after the injection of HRP in postnatal (1–10 days) rats. Similar cells around the mesencephalic aqueduct and the fourth ventricle were also labelled. These cells, however, were weakly labelled in developing (11–20 days) and unlabelled in weaning (21–30 days) rats. The results suggest that in the postnatal rats, the HRP passed through the endothehal lining of the blood vessels and was then ingested by the amoeboid microglial cells. In the developing and older rats, the wall of blood vessels had developed fully thereby preventing the free passage of HRP into the brain tissues.