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1.
The removal of plasma proteins from a vascular perfusate results in increased labeling of the endothelial cell (EC) vesicles and increased permeability of the capillary wall to water and solutes. The hypothesis that albumin forms part of a molecular filter composed of a network of fibrous molecules is evaluated. The fibrous network covers the EC surface and penetrates the intercellular junctions. Albumin may simply occupy space within the matrix to increase the resistance to water flow and increase exclusion and restriction to diffusion of solutes. Electrostatic interactions between positively charged sites on albumin and negatively charged fibers may also order the fibrous network into a more selective array. In the presence of albumin, the fibrous network would determine the selectivity of the capillary wall. An alternative hypothesis, that a selective pathway is formed when albumin is adsorbed to the walls of the wide portion of the slit, is inconsistent with the area required for the diffusion of small solutes between the endothelial cells. However, the geometry of intercellular channels may partially determine the selectivity of the capillary wall when the fiber matrix containing albumin is disrupted.  相似文献   

2.
Reflectance interference contrast microscopy (RICM) was used to study the mechanics of the endothelial glycocalyx. This technique tracks the vertical position of a glass microsphere probe that applies very light fluctuating loads to the outermost layer of the bovine lung microvascular endothelial cell (BLMVEC) glycocalyx. Fluctuations in probe vertical position are used to estimate the effective stiffness of the underlying layer. Stiffness was measured before and after removal of specific glycocalyx components. The mean stiffness of BLMVEC glycocalyx was found to be ~7.5 kT/nm(2) (or ~31 pN/nm). Enzymatic digestion of the glycocalyx with pronase or hyaluronan with hyaluronidase increased the mean effective stiffness of the glycocalyx; however, the increase of the mean stiffness on digestion of heparan sulfate with heparinase III was not significant. The results imply that hyaluronan chains act as a cushioning layer to distribute applied forces to the glycocalyx structure. Effective stiffness was also measured for the glycocalyx exposed to 0.1%, 1.0%, and 4.0% BSA; glycocalyx compliance increased at two extreme BSA concentrations. The RICM images indicated that glycocalyx thickness increases with BSA concentrations. Results demonstrate that RICM is sensitive to detect the subtle changes of glycocalyx compliance at the fluid-fiber interface.  相似文献   

3.
Lung endothelial cells respond to changes in vascular pressure through mechanotransduction pathways that alter barrier function via non-Starling mechanism(s). Components of the endothelial glycocalyx have been shown to participate in mechanotransduction in vitro and in systemic vessels, but the glycocalyx's role in mechanosensing and pulmonary barrier function has not been characterized. Mechanotransduction pathways may represent novel targets for therapeutic intervention during states of elevated pulmonary pressure such as acute heart failure, fluid overload, and mechanical ventilation. Our objective was to assess the effects of increasing vascular pressure on whole lung filtration coefficient (K(fc)) and characterize the role of endothelial heparan sulfates in mediating mechanotransduction and associated increases in K(fc). Isolated perfused rat lung preparation was used to measure K(fc) in response to changes in vascular pressure in combination with superimposed changes in airway pressure. The roles of heparan sulfates, nitric oxide, and reactive oxygen species were investigated. Increases in capillary pressure altered K(fc) in a nonlinear relationship, suggesting non-Starling mechanism(s). nitro-l-arginine methyl ester and heparanase III attenuated the effects of increased capillary pressure on K(fc), demonstrating active mechanotransduction leading to barrier dysfunction. The nitric oxide (NO) donor S-nitrosoglutathione exacerbated pressure-mediated increase in K(fc). Ventilation strategies altered lung NO concentration and the K(fc) response to increases in vascular pressure. This is the first study to demonstrate a role for the glycocalyx in whole lung mechanotransduction and has important implications in understanding the regulation of vascular permeability in the context of vascular pressure, fluid status, and ventilation strategies.  相似文献   

4.
Vascular endothelial cells are shielded from direct exposure to flowing blood by the endothelial glycocalyx, a highly hydrated mesh of glycoproteins, sulfated proteoglycans, and associated glycosaminoglycans (GAGs). Recent data indicate that the incorporation of the unsulfated GAG hyaluronan into the endothelial glycocalyx is essential to maintain its permeability barrier properties, and we hypothesized that fluid shear stress is an important stimulus for endothelial hyaluronan synthesis. To evaluate the effect of shear stress on glycocalyx synthesis and the shedding of its GAGs into the supernatant, cultured human umbilical vein endothelial cells (i.e., the stable cell line EC-RF24) were exposed to 10 dyn/cm2 nonpulsatile shear stress for 24 h, and the incorporation of [3H]glucosamine and Na2[35S]O4 into GAGs was determined. Furthermore, the amount of hyaluronan in the glycocalyx and in the supernatant was determined by ELISA. Shear stress did not affect the incorporation of 35S but significantly increased the amount of glucosamine-containing GAGs incorporated in the endothelial glycocalyx [168 (SD 17)% of static levels, P < 0.01] and shedded into the supernatant [231 (SD 41)% of static levels, P < 0.01]. Correspondingly with this finding, shear stress increased the amount of hyaluronan in the glycocalyx [from 26 (SD 24) x 10(-4) to 46 (SD 29) x 10(-4) ng/cell, static vs. shear stress, P < 0.05] and in the supernatant [from 28 (SD 11) x 10(-4) to 55 (SD 16) x 10(-4) ng x cell(-1) x h(-1), static vs. shear stress, P < 0.05]. The increase in the amount of hyaluronan incorporated in the glycocalyx was confirmed by a threefold higher level of hyaluronan binding protein within the glycocalyx of shear stress-stimulated endothelial cells. In conclusion, fluid shear stress stimulates incorporation of hyaluronan in the glycocalyx, which may contribute to its vasculoprotective effects against proinflammatory and pro-atherosclerotic stimuli.  相似文献   

5.
A healthy vascular endothelium is coated by the endothelial glycocalyx. Its main constituents are transmembrane syndecans and bound heparan sulphates. This structure maintains the physiological endothelial permeability barrier and prevents leukocyte and platelet adhesion, thereby mitigating inflammation and tissue oedema. Heparinase, a bacterial analogue to heparanase, is known to attack the glycocalyx. However, the exact extent and specificity of degradation is unresolved. We show by electron microscopy, immunohistological staining and quantitative measurements of the constituent parts, that heparinase selectively sheds heparan sulphate from the glycocalyx, but not the syndecans.  相似文献   

6.
We investigated the nonlinear dynamics of the pressure vs. hydraulic conductivity (L(p)) relationship in lung microvascular endothelial cells and demonstrate that heparan sulfates, an important component of the endothelial glycocalyx, participate in pressure-sensitive mechanotransduction that results in barrier dysfunction. The pressure vs. L(p) relationship was complex, possessing both time- and pressure-dependent components. Pretreatment of lung capillary endothelial cells with heparanase III completely abolished the pressure-induced increase in L(p). This extends our (7) previous observation regarding heparan sulfates as mechanotransducers for shear stress. Inhibition of nitric oxide (NO) synthase with L-NAME (N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester HCl) and intracellular scavenging of reactive oxygen species (ROS) by TBAP [tetrakis-(4-benzoic acid) porphorin] significantly attenuated the pressure-induced L(p) response. Intracellular NO/ROS were visualized using the fluorescent dye, 2'7'-dichlorofluorescein diacetate (DCFA), and cells demonstrated a pressure-induced increase in intracellular fluorescence. Heparanase pretreatment significantly reduced the pressure-induced increase in intracellular fluorescence, suggesting that cell-surface heparan sulfates directly participate in mechanotransduction that results in NO/ROS production and increased permeability. This is the first report to demonstrate a role for heparan sulfates in pressure-mediated mechanotransduction and barrier regulation. These observations may have important clinical implications during conditions where pulmonary microvascular pressure is elevated.  相似文献   

7.
We tested the hypothesis that the effective oncotic force that opposes fluid filtration across the microvessel wall is the local oncotic pressure difference across the endothelial surface glycocalyx and not the global difference between the plasma and tissue. In single frog mesenteric microvessels perfused and superfused with solutions containing 50 mg/ml albumin, the effective oncotic pressure exerted across the microvessel wall was not significantly different from that measured when the perfusate alone contained albumin at 50 mg/ml. Measurements were made during transient and steady-state filtration at capillary pressures between 10 and 35 cmH(2)O. A cellular-level model of coupled water and solute flows in the interendothelial cleft showed water flux through small breaks in the junctional strand limited back diffusion of albumin into the protected space on the tissue side of the glycocalyx. Thus oncotic forces opposing filtration are larger than those estimated from blood-to-tissue protein concentration differences, and transcapillary fluid flux is smaller than estimated from global differences in oncotic and hydrostatic pressures.  相似文献   

8.
The mechanical properties of endothelial glycocalyx were studied using atomic force microscopy with a silica bead (diameter ~18 μm) serving as an indenter. Even at indentations of several hundred nanometers, the bead exerted very low compressive pressures on the bovine lung microvascular endothelial cell (BLMVEC) glycocalyx and allowed for an averaging of stiffness in the bead-cell contact area. The elastic modulus of BLMVEC glycocalyx was determined as a pointwise function of the indentation depth before and after enzymatic degradation of specific glycocalyx components. The modulus-indentation depth profiles showed the cells becoming progressively stiffer with increased indentation. Three different enzymes were used: heparinases III and I and hyaluronidase. The main effects of heparinase III and hyaluronidase enzymes were that the elastic modulus in the cell junction regions increased more rapidly with the indentation than in BLMVEC controls, and that the effective thickness of glycocalyx was reduced. Cytochalasin D abolished the modulus increase with the indentation. The confocal profiling of heparan sulfate and hyaluronan with atomic force microscopy indentation data demonstrated marked heterogeneity of the glycocalyx composition between cell junctions and nuclear regions.  相似文献   

9.
The glomerular capillary endothelium is highly specialized to support the selective filtration of massive volumes of plasma. Filtration is driven by Starling forces acting across the glomerular capillary wall, and depends on its large surface area and extremely high water permeability. Glomerular endothelial cells are extremely flat and perforated by dense arrays of trans-cellular pores, the fenestrae. This phenotype is critical for the high glomerular water permeability and depends on podocyte-derived VEGF, as well as TGF-beta. Endothelial cell-derived PDGFB, in turn, is necessary for the establishment of mesangial cells, which sculpt the glomerular loop structure that underlies the large filtration surface area. In pre-eclampsia, inhibition of the VEGF- and TGF-beta signaling pathways leads to endothelial swelling and loss of fenestrae, reducing the glomerular filtration rate. Similarly, in the thrombotic microangiopathies, glomerular endothelial cell injury coupled with inappropriate VWF activation leads to intracapillary platelet aggregation and loss of the flat, fenestrated phenotype, thus reducing the glomerular filtration rate. Normally, a remarkably small fraction of albumin and other large plasma proteins passes across the glomerular capillary wall despite the massive filtration of water and small solutes. An elaborate glycocalyx, which covers glomerular endothelial cells and their fenestrae forms an impressive barrier that, together with other components of the glomerular capillary wall, prevents loss of plasma proteins into the urine. Indeed, microalbuminuria is a marker for endothelial glycocalyx disruption, and most forms of glomerular endothelial cell injury including pre-eclampsia and thrombotic microangiopaties can cause proteinuria.  相似文献   

10.
Duffy SL  Murphy JT 《BioTechniques》2001,31(3):495-6, 498, 500-1
Endothelial "capillary leak", the loss of vascular integrity in response to noxious stimuli, is characterized by extravasation of protein-richfluidfrom capillary lumen into surrounding tissue interstitium. This increase in vascular permeability, in response to inflammatory mediators, correlates with endothelial cell contraction and the formation of intercellular gaps within the monolayer. However, in vivo assessment of paracellular solute flow between endothelial cells may be complicated by multiple uncontrolled parameters. In vitro examinations of endothelial barrier leak have relied on electrical impedence or macromolecule diffusion techniques to determine the details pertinent to capillary barrier function. In this report, a simple, sensitive, nonradioactive, colorimetric assay to quantify the leak of a labeled protein marker across endothelial monolayers is described. This procedure avoids the hazards of radioisotope labels and the technical limitations of electrical resistance technology.  相似文献   

11.
The glycocalyx, and the thicker endothelial surface layer (ESL), are necessary both for endothelial barrier function and for sensing mechanical forces in the adult. The goal of this study is to use a combination of imaging techniques to establish when the glycocalyx and endothelial surface layer form during embryonic development and to determine the biological significance of the glycocalyx layer during vascular development in quail embryos. Using transmission electron microscopy, we show that the glycocalyx layer is present as soon as blood flow starts (14 somites). The early endothelial glycocalyx (14 somites) lacks the distinct hair-like morphology that is present later in development (17 and 25 somites). The average thickness does not change significantly (14 somites, 182nm±33nm; 17 somites, 218±30nm; 25 somites, 212±32nm). The trapping of circulating fluorescent albumin was used to evaluate the development of the ESL. Trapped fluorescent albumin was first observed at 25 somites. In order to assess a functional role for the glycocalyx during development, we selectively degraded luminal glycosaminoglycans. Degradation of hyaluronan compromised endothelial barrier function and prevented vascular remodeling. Degradation of heparan sulfate down regulated the expression of shear-sensitive genes but does not inhibit vascular remodeling. Our findings show that the glycocalyx layer is present as soon as blood flow starts (14 somites). Selective degradations of major glycocalyx components were shown to inhibit normal vascular development, examined through morphology, vascular barrier function, and gene expression.  相似文献   

12.
Endothelial glycocalyx degradation, critical for increased pulmonary vascular permeability, is thought to facilitate the development of sepsis into the multiple organ failure. Maresin conjugates in tissue regeneration 1 (MCTR1), a macrophage-derived lipid mediator, which exhibits potentially beneficial effects via the regulation of bacterial phagocytosis, promotion of inflammation resolution, and regeneration of tissue. In this study, we show that MCTR1 (100 ng/mouse) enhances the survival of mice with lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced (15 mg/kg) sepsis. MCTR1 alleviates LPS (10 mg/kg)-induced lung dysfunction and lung tissue inflammatory response by decreasing inflammatory cytokines (tumor necrosis factor-α, interleukin-1β [IL-1β], and IL-6) expression in serum and reducing the serum levels of heparan sulfate (HS) and syndecan-1. In human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) experiments, MCTR1 (100 nM) was added to the culture medium with LPS for 6 hr. MCTR1 treatment markedly inhibited HS degradation by downregulating heparanase (HPA) protein expression in vivo and in vitro. Further analyses indicated that MCTR1 upregulates sirtuin 1 (SIRT1) expression and decreases NF-κB p65 phosphorylation. In the presence of BOC-2 or EX527, the above effects of MCTR1 were abolished. These results suggest that MCTR1 protects against LPS-induced sepsis in mice by attenuating pulmonary endothelial glycocalyx injury via the ALX/SIRT1/NF-κB/HPA pathway.  相似文献   

13.
Pulmonary microvascular response to LTB4: effects of perfusate composition   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We examined the effects of leukotriene B4 (LTB4) on pulmonary hemodynamics and vascular permeability using isolated perfused guinea pig lungs and cultured monolayers of pulmonary arterial endothelial cells. In lungs perfused with Ringer solution, containing 0.5 g/100 ml albumin (R-alb), LTB4 (4 micrograms) transiently increased pulmonary arterial pressure (Ppa) and capillary pressure (Pcap). Pulmonary edema developed within 70 min after LTB4 injection despite a normal Pcap. The LTB4 metabolite, 20-COOH-LTB4 (4 micrograms), did not induce hemodynamic and lung weight changes. In lungs perfused with autologous blood hematocrit = 12 +/- 1%; protein concentration = 1.5 +/- 0.2 g/100 ml), the increases in Ppa and Pcap were greater, and both pressures remained elevated. The lung weight did not increase in blood-perfused lungs. In lungs perfused with R-alb (1.5 g/100 ml albumin) to match the blood perfusate protein concentration, LTB4 induced similar hemodynamic changes as R-alb (0.5 g/100 ml) perfusate, but the additional albumin prevented the pulmonary edema. LTB4 (10(-11)-10(-6) M) with or without the addition of neutrophils to the monolayer did not increase endothelial 125I-albumin permeability. Therefore LTB4 induces pulmonary edema when the perfusate contains a low albumin concentration, but increasing the albumin concentration or adding blood cells prevents the edema. The edema is not due to increased endothelial permeability to protein and is independent of hemodynamic alterations. Protection at higher protein-concentration may be the result of LTB4 binding to albumin.  相似文献   

14.
On the surface of endothelial cells (ECs) lies the glycocalyx, a barrier of polysaccharides that isolates the ECs from the blood. The role of the glycocalyx is dynamic and complex, thanks to not only its structure, but its vast number of components, one being hyaluronan (HA). HA is a critical component of the glycocalyx, having been found to have a wide variety of functions depending on its molecular weight, its modification, and receptor–ligand interactions. As HA and viscous blood are in constant contact, HA can transmit mechanosensory information directly to the cytoskeleton of the ECs. The degradation and synthesis of HA directly alters the permeability of the EC barrier; HA modulation not only alters the physical barrier but also can signal the initiation of other pathways. EC proliferation and angiogenesis are in part regulated by HA fragmentation, HA-dependent receptor binding, and downstream signals. The interaction between the CD44 receptor and HA is a driving force behind leukocyte recruitment, but each class of leukocyte still interacts with HA in unique ways during inflammation. HA regulates a diverse repertoire of EC functions.  相似文献   

15.
Polymorphonuclear leukocyte: arachidonate edema   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) are important participants in many models of acute lung edema. Enhanced metabolism of arachidonate is also characteristic of many of these models. We found that PMN and arachidonate, but neither alone, increased alveolar capillary permeability of isolated perfused lungs and increased transfer of albumin across monolayers of endothelial cells cultured on micropore filters. Inhibition of PMN, but not endothelial cyclooxygenase, blunted the edematous process. Neither PMN proteases nor PMN-derived oxidants were involved. The edemagenic activity was not found in supernatants of PMN and arachidonate, and unstable prostaglandins did not alter endothelial albumin transfer. The edemagenic process was not inhibited by blocking leukotriene synthesis, and endothelial albumin transfer was not increased by direct addition of leukotrienes to endothelium. These data demonstrate that PMN and arachidonate can interact to increase endothelial permeability and that PMN cyclooxygenase activity is important for this process. This interaction is of potential significance to the acute inflammatory process in the lung vasculature.  相似文献   

16.
Selective permeability of endocardial endothelium has been suggested as a mechanism underlying the modulation of the performance of subjacent myocardium. In this study, we characterized the organization and permeability of junctional complexes in ventricular endocardial endothelium in rat heart. The length of intercellular clefts viewed en face per unit endothelial cell surface area was lower, and intercellular clefts were deeper in endocardial endothelium than in myocardial vascular endothelium, whereas tight junctions had a similar structure in both endothelia. On this basis, endocardia endothelium. might be less permeable than capillary endothelium. However, confocal scanning laser microscopy showed that intravenously injected dextran 10000 coupled to Lucifer Yellow penetrated first the endocardial endothelium and later the myocardial capillary endothelium. Penetration of dextran 10000 in myocardium occurred earlier through subepicardial capillary endothelium than through subendocardial capillary endothelium. Penetration of tracer might thus be influenced by hydrostatic pressure. Dextran of MW 40000 did not diffuse through either endocardial endothelium or capilary endothelium. The ultrastructure of endocardial endothelium may constitute an adaptation to limit diffusion driven by high hydrostatic pressure in the heart. Differences in paracellular diffusion of dextran 10000 between endocardial endothelium and myocardial vessels, may result from differing permeability properties of the endocardium and underlying myocardium.  相似文献   

17.
An electrochemical theory of the glycocalyx surface layer on capillary endothelial cells is developed as a model to study the electrochemical dynamics of anionic molecular transport within capillaries. Combining a constitutive relationship for electrochemical transport, derived from Fick's and Ohm's laws, with the conservation of mass and Gauss's law from electrostatics, a system of three nonlinear, coupled, second-order, partial, integro-differential equations is obtained for the concentrations of the diffusing anionic molecules and the cations and anions in the blood. With the exception of small departures from electroneutrality that arise locally near the apical region of the glycocalyx, the model assumes that cations in the blood counterbalance the fixed negative charges bound to the macromolecular matrix of the glycocalyx in equilibrium. In the presence of anionic molecular tracers injected into the capillary lumen, the model predicts the size- and charge-dependent electrophoretic mobility of ions and tracers within the layer. In particular, the model predicts that anionic molecules are excluded from the glycocalyx at equilibrium and that the extent of this exclusion, which increases with increasing tracer and/or glycocalyx electronegativity, is a fundamental determinant of anionic molecular transport through the layer. The model equations were integrated numerically using a Crank-Nicolson finite-difference scheme and Newton-Raphson iteration. When the concentration of the anionic molecular tracer is small compared with the concentration of ions in the blood, a linearized version of the model can be obtained and solved as an eigenvalue problem. The results of the linear and nonlinear models were found to be in good agreement for this physiologically important case. Furthermore, if the fixed-charge density of the glycocalyx is of the order of the concentration of ions in the blood, or larger, or if the magnitude of the anionic molecular valence is large, a closed-form asymptotic solution for the diffusion time can be obtained from the eigenvalue problem that compares favorably with the numerical solution. In either case, if leakage of anionic molecules out of the capillary occurs, diffusion time is seen to vary exponentially with anionic valence and in inverse proportion to the steady-state anionic tracer concentration in the layer relative to the lumen. These findings suggest several methods for obtaining an estimate of the glycocalyx fixed-charge density in vivo.  相似文献   

18.
To evaluate albumin transport across the pulmonary capillary endothelial and interstitial barriers, we simultaneously measured blood-to-tissue (QA,t) and blood-to-lymph (QA,l) clearances of 125I-radiolabeled albumin as well as endogenous albumin clearance (Qa,l) in the canine lung in vivo (n = 10). Steady-state prenodal lung lymph flows (Qw,l) and protein clearances were measured over a 2-h period at a constant capillary pressure (Pc, 13-33 cmH2O). Comparison between QA,t and QA,l as a function of Pc suggests that little of the albumin that crossed the capillary wall remained in the lung tissue, with most leaving in the lymph. Qw,l increased significantly as Pc increased, but lung tissue water was minimally affected. From the ratio of the clearance-Pc slopes for albumin and water, the albumin reflection coefficient was estimated to be 0.81 using QA,l and Qw,l and 0.56 using Qa,l and Qw,l. The permeability surface area product for the sum of blood-to-tissue and blood-to-lymph fluxes of labeled albumin (QA,t + QA,l) was 31 +/- 9 microliters/min, whereas that calculated from the blood-to-lymph flux of endogenous albumin (Qa,l) was 97 +/- 22 microliters/min. These data suggest that 1) both tissue and lymph accumulations of albumin must be considered when microvascular permeability is evaluated using protein tracers; 2) lymph clearance, but not tissue accumulation of albumin, was filtration dependent; and 3) lymph flow was an important contributor to the safety factor against edema formation over a moderate range of capillary pressures.  相似文献   

19.
Endothelial surface glycocalyx plays an important role in the regulation of microvessel permeability by possibly changing its charge and configuration. To investigate the mechanisms by which surface properties of the endothelial cells control the changes in microvessel permeability, we extended the electrodiffusion model developed by Fu et al. [Am. J. Physiol. 284, H1240-1250 (2003)], which is for the interendothelial cleft with a negatively charged surface glycocalyx layer, to include the filtration due to hydrostatic and oncotic pressures across the microvessel wall as well as the electrical potential across the glycocalyx layer On the basis of the hypotheses proposed by Curry [Microcirculation 1(1): 11-26 (1994)], the predictions from this electrodiffusion-filtration model provide a good agreement with experimental data for permeability of negatively charged a-lactalbumin summarized in Curry [Microcirculation 1(1), 11-26 (1994)] under various conditions. In addition, we applied this new model to describe the transport of negatively charged macromolecules, bovine serum albumin (BSA), across venular microvessels in frog mesentery. According to the model, the convective component of the albumin transport is greatly diminished by the presence of a negatively charged glycocalyx under both normal and increased permeability conditions.  相似文献   

20.
We examined the distribution of β-catenin and endogenous blood serum albumin at the ultrastructural level in blood microvessels (capillaries) from brains of control and trisomic Ts65Dn mice. Morphological examination revealed an increased immunolabeling for β-catenin in endothelial substructures of the capillary network, such as intercellular junctions, cytoplasm, and nuclei. These immunosignals were significantly increased in all endothelial substructures from trisomic mice. These changes, however, did not affect the blood–brain barrier function of the entire microvascular network, because the increased uptake of albumin by endothelial cells and the eventual escape of this protein (microleakage) into the perivascular neuropil were noted only in a few capillary profiles. Nevertheless, these findings suggest the involvement of some segments of the microvascular network in the brain pathology associated with DS.  相似文献   

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