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1.
Contractile elements in the regulation of macromolecular permeability   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The leakage of macromolecules from the vasculature to the interstitium is greatly accentuated by mediators of edema such as histamine and bradykinin. The mechanism for this effect is not well delineated although many agents that affect smooth muscle tone may also affect macromolecular leakage. Leakage occurs primarily from the small venules. The demonstration that mediators of edema produce interendothelial gaps in the venules as well as changes in the shape of the endothelial nuclei has led to the hypothesis that a contraction of a vascular wall component may be responsible for the observed leakage of macromolecules. This component does not appear to be the vascular smooth muscle itself. Two other elements of the vascular wall, the endothelium and the pericytes, have been shown to contain many of the same elements of the contractile machinery present in smooth muscle. Most recent studies have presumed that endothelial cell contraction is responsible for the formation of the interendothelial gaps through which the macromolecules move. However, endothelial contraction has been difficult to demonstrate experimentally. Alternatively, inasmuch as pericytic processes can end near endothelial junctions and there is an abundance of fibronectin between the pericytes and the endothelium, it may be a pericytic contraction that causes the interendothelial gap formation.  相似文献   

2.
Intestinal capillaries. II. Structural effects ofEDTA and histamine   总被引:4,自引:1,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Perfusion of the fenestrated capillaries of the intestinal mucosa of the rat with 0.05–0.1 M EDTA removes the diaphragms of the endothelial cells and detaches these cells from one another and from the basement membrane. The latter, even when completely denuded, retains effectively particles of 340 A (average) diameter. Perfusion with histamine (1 µg/ml) results in partial removal of fenestral diaphragms, occasional detachment of the endothelium from the basement membrane, and focal separation of endothelial intercellular junctions.  相似文献   

3.
PV1 is an endothelial-specific integral membrane glycoprotein associated with the stomatal diaphragms of caveolae, transendothelial channels, and vesiculo-vacuolar organelles and the diaphragms of endothelial fenestrae. Multiple PV1 homodimers are found within each stomatal and fenestral diaphragm. We investigated the function of PV1 within these diaphragms and their regulation and found that treatment of endothelial cells in culture with phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) led to upregulation of PV1. This correlated with de novo formation of stomatal diaphragms of caveolae and transendothelial channels as well as fenestrae upon PMA treatment. The newly formed diaphragms could be labeled with anti-PV1 antibodies. The upregulation of PV1 and formation of stomatal and fenestral diaphragms by PMA was endothelium specific and was the highest in microvascular endothelial cells compared with their large vessel counterparts. By using a siRNA approach, PV1 mRNA silencing prevented the de novo formation of the diaphragms of caveolae as well as fenestrae and transendothelial channels. Overexpression of PV1 in endothelial cells as well as in cell types that do not harbor caveolar diaphragms in situ induced de novo formation of caveolar stomatal diaphragms. Lastly, PV1 upregulation by PMA required the activation of Erk1/2 MAP kinase pathway and was protein kinase C independent. Taken together, these data show that PV1 is a key structural component, necessary for the biogenesis of the stomatal and fenestral diaphragms.  相似文献   

4.
Summary The location and chemical composition of anionic sites on the endothelium of the choriocapillaris was investigated with cationic ferritin and enzyme digestion techniques. Cationic ferritin administered intravenously initially labeled essentially all fenestral diaphragms. Within 30 min after injection, no diaphrams remained labeled, but they could be relabeled by a second cationic ferritin injection. Following perfusion of cationic ferritin, the entire luminal front of the endothelium was labeled: the plasmalemma and fenestral, vesicle, and channel diaphragms. Perfusion of neuraminidase or chondroitinase did not affect subsequent cationic ferritin binding. In contrast, heparitinase removed anionic sites on all structures except fenestral diaphragms. Cationic ferritin did not mark the endothelium following heparinase digestion. All sites were cleaved with pronase E. These results indicate that heparin is the anionic moiety on fenestral diaphragms while the glycocalcyces of the plasmalemma and vesicle and channel diaphragms are rich in a heparan sulfate proteoglycan. Furthermore, since the heparan sulfate localized to these structures was digested by both heparinase and heparitinase, it is in a form similar to heparin. These findings demonstrate that the endothelium of the choriocapillaris bears cell-surface anionic components that are different than those described for fenestrated endothelia lining other vascular beds.Supported by NIH EY 03776  相似文献   

5.
The endothelial glycocalyx is a gel-like layer which covers the luminal side of blood vessels. The glomerular endothelial cell (GEnC) glycocalyx is composed of proteoglycan core proteins, glycosaminoglycan (GAG) chains, and sialoglycoproteins and has been shown to contribute to the selective sieving action of the glomerular capillary wall. Damage to the systemic endothelial glycocalyx has recently been associated with the onset of albuminuria in diabetics. In this study, we analyze the effects of high glucose on the biochemical structure of the GEnC glycocalyx and quantify functional changes in its protein-restrictive action. We used conditionally immortalized human GEnC. Proteoglycans were analyzed by Western blotting and indirect immunofluorescence. Biosynthesis of GAG was analyzed by radiolabeling and quantified by anion exchange chromatography. FITC-albumin was used to analyze macromolecular passage across GEnC monolayers using an established in vitro model. We observed a marked reduction in the biosynthesis of GAG by the GEnC under high-glucose conditions. Further analysis confirmed specific reduction in heparan sulfate GAG. Expression of proteoglycan core proteins remained unchanged. There was also a significant increase in the passage of albumin across GEnC monolayers under high-glucose conditions without affecting interendothelial junctions. These results reproduce changes in GEnC barrier properties caused by enzymatic removal of heparan sulfate from the GEnC glycocalyx. They provide direct evidence of high glucose-induced alterations in the GEnC glycocalyx and demonstrate changes to its function as a protein-restrictive layer, thus implicating glycocalyx damage in the pathogenesis of proteinuria in diabetes.  相似文献   

6.
Pain, redness, heat, and swelling are hallmarks of inflammation that were recognized as early as the first century AD. Despite these early observations, the mechanisms responsible for swelling, in particular, remained an enigma for nearly two millennia. Only in the past century have scientists and physicians gained an appreciation for the role that vascular endothelium plays in controlling the exudation that is responsible for swelling. One of these mechanisms is the formation of transient gaps between adjacent endothelial cell borders. Inflammatory mediators act on endothelium to reorganize the cytoskeleton, decrease the strength of proteins that connect cells together, and induce transient gaps between endothelial cells. These gaps form a paracellular route responsible for exudation. The discovery that interendothelial cell gaps are causally linked to exudation began in the 1960s and was accompanied by significant controversy. Today, the role of gap formation in tissue edema is accepted by many, and significant scientific effort is dedicated toward developing therapeutic strategies that will prevent or reverse the endothelial cell gaps that are present during the course of inflammatory illness. Given the importance of this field in endothelial cell biology and inflammatory disease, this focused review catalogs key historical advances that contributed to our modern-day understanding of the cell biology of interendothelial gap formation.  相似文献   

7.
The transendothelial passage of horseradish peroxidase, injected intravenously into mice, was studied at the ultrastructural level in capillaries of cardiac and skeletal muscle. Peroxidase appeared to permeate endothelial intercellular clefts and cell junctions. Abnormal peroxidase-induced vascular leakage was excluded. Neutral lanthanum tracer gave similar results. The endothelial cell junctions were considered to be maculae occludentes, with gaps of about 40 A in width between the maculae, rather than zonulae occludentes. Some observations in favor of concurrent vesicular transport of peroxidase were also made. It is concluded that the endothelial cell junctions are most likely to be the morphological equivalent of the small pore system proposed by physiologists for the passage of small, lipid-insoluble molecules across the endothelium.  相似文献   

8.
Several of the endothelium-specific structures that have been involved in microvascular permeability [such as caveolae, transendothelial channels (TECs), vesiculovacuolar organelles (VVOs), and fenestrae] can be provided with either a stomatal or fenestral diaphragm. In the case of fenestrae, the diaphragm has the presumed function of creating a permselective barrier for solutes from blood plasma and interstitium. PV1 is an endothelium-specific integral membrane glycoprotein that is associated with both the stomatal diaphragms of caveolae, TECs, and VVOs as well as the diaphragms of endothelial fenestrae. The intimate structure of these diaphragms has been shown to consist of a meshwork formed by radial fibrils. We have recently shown that PV1 is a key structural element of both types of diaphragms, with its expression being sufficient to form de novo stomatal and fenestral diaphragms in both endothelial and nonendothelial cell types in culture. We have further tested the role of PV1 in the structure of the diaphragms and demonstrate here that multiple PV1 homodimers reside in close proximity within the same diaphragm. Our data bring further support to the paradigm by which PV1 dimers would form the fibrils of the diaphragms with a function in the microvascular permeability.  相似文献   

9.
The endothelial glycocalyx is believed to play a major role in capillary permeability by functioning as a macromolecular barrier overlying the intercellular junction. Little is known about the functional attributes of the glycocalyx (i.e., porosity and permeability) or which constituents contribute to its overall structure-function relationship. In this report, we demonstrate the utility of fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) to measure albumin diffusion rates and concentration profiles above the cell surface and overlying the intercellular junctions of lung capillary endothelial cells. Albumin diffusion rates and concentration profiles were obtained before and after enzymatic digestion of the glycocalyx with pronase, heparanase, or hyaluronidase. The results suggest a structure interacting with albumin located from 1.0 to 2.0 microm above the cell membrane capable of reducing albumin diffusion by 30% while simultaneously increasing albumin concentration fivefold. Digestion of the glycocalyx with pronase or heparanase resulted in only modest changes in albumin diffusion and concentration profiles. Hyaluronidase digestion completely eliminated albumin-glycocalyx interactions. These data also suggest that hyaluronan is a major determinant for albumin interactions with the lung endothelial glycocalyx. Confocal images of heparan sulfate and hyaluronan confirm a cell-surface layer 2-3 mum in thickness, thus supporting FCS measurements. In summary, we report the first use of FCS to probe extracellular structures and further our understanding of the structure-function relationship of the lung microvascular endothelial glycocalyx.  相似文献   

10.
The endothelial glycocalyx mediates interactions between the blood flow and the endothelium. This study aims to evaluate, quantitatively, effects of structural change of the glycocalyx on stress distribution and shear rate on endothelial cells. In the study, the endothelial glycocalyx is modeled as a surface layer of fiber matrix and when exposed to laminar shear flow, the matrix deforms. Fluid velocity and stress distribution inside the matrix and on cell membranes are studied based on a binary mixture theory. Parameters, such as the height and porosity of the matrix and the drag coefficient between fluid and matrix fibrils, are based on available data and estimation from experiments. Simple theoretical solutions are achieved for fluid velocity and stress distribution in the surface matrix. Degradation of the matrix, e.g., by enzyme digestion, is represented by reductions in the volume fraction of fibrils, height, and drag coefficient. From a force balance, total stress on endothelial surface remains constant regardless of structural alteration of the glycocalyx. However, the stress that is transmitted to endothelial cells by direct "pulling" of fiber branches of the glycocalyx is reduced significantly. Fluid shear rate at the cell membrane, on the other hand, increases. The study gives quantitative insight into the effect of the structural change of the glycocalyx on the shear rate and pulling stress on the endothelium. Results can be used to interpret experiments on effects of the glycocalyx in shear induced endothelial responses.  相似文献   

11.
Sialic acid-bearing molecules on the luminal surface of the vascular endothelium in mouse and rat pancreatic capillaries were detected electron microscopically by using a procedure with ferritin hydrazide (FH), after preferential oxidation of sialyl residues with sodium periodate. The distribution of FH on the endothelial surface demonstrated the existence of microdomains with various densities of sialoglycoconjugates oxidizable by sodium periodate and accessible to the tracer. On the plasmalemma proper, FH binding sites were heterogeneously distributed. Their concentration on various microdomains decreased as follows: plasmalemma proper greater than coated pits greater than stomal diaphragms of plasmalemmal vesicles and transendothelial channels, and fenestral diaphragms. The membrane of plasmalemmal vesicles and transendothelial channels was not labeled by FH. Nonspecific binding of FH to the nonoxidized endothelial surface or that oxidized after neuraminidase treatment was relatively low.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
Glycocalyx is a complex of membrane-bound molecules at the interface between circulating blood and the endothelium of the vessel wall; it performs a number of specific biological functions maintaining vascular homeostasis. It contains sulfated glycosaminoglycans (proteoglycans) bound to membrane proteins, hyaluronan, glycoproteins, and plasma proteins. Today, endothelial glycocalyx is considered not only a simple inert barrier and molecular sieve, but a self-renewable three-dimensional network of various polysaccharides and protein derivatives, a reservoir of biologically active compounds, and the mechanical transducer of circulation sheer stress onto the endothelium. Under conditions of pathological vascular damages, endothelial glycocalyx is destroyed, which impairs the integrity of the vascular wall at the level of macro- and microcirculation and leads to development of the cardiovascular disorders and other diseases. Destruction of glycocalyx seems to be one of the first stages of vascular damage. This explains the diagnostic value of detection and therapeutic importance of correction of glycocalyx damage. Biomedical application of endothelial glycocalyx and its individual components in molecular and cellular engineering seems promising.  相似文献   

14.
Endogenous albumin was revealed over cellular structures of rat ascendent aorta endothelia and mesothelium, with high resolution and specificity, by applying the protein A-gold immunocytochemical approach. This approach allows albumin distribution to be studied under steady-state conditions. The cellular layers evaluated were the aortic endothelium, the capillary endothelium (vasa vasorum), and the mesothelium externally lining the aorta at this level. Gold particles, revealing albumin antigenic sites, were preferentially located over plasmalemmal vesicles and intercellular clefts of endothelial and mesothelial cells, though with different labeling intensities. The interstitial space was also labeled. Morphometrical evaluation of plasmalemmal vesicles demonstrated a higher surface density for these structures in capillary endothelial cells (12%) compared with those in aortic endothelial (5%) and mesothelial cells (2%). Quantitation of gold labeling intensities over these structures revealed a higher labeling over plasmalemmal vesicles of capillary endothelium than over those of aortic endothelium and mesothelium. This result, together with the higher surface density of plasmalemmal vesicles found in capillary endothelium, suggest an important role of these structures in the transendothelial passage of endogenous albumin, particularly for capillary endothelium. On the other hand, labeling densities over mesothelial clefts were found to be higher than those of capillary and aortic endothelia. Results from this study concur with the proposal of a differential passage of albumin according to the cell lining considered, and suggest to a role for mesothelial intercellular clefts in contributing to the presence of albumin in interstitial spaces.  相似文献   

15.
Summary The endothelial glycocalyx, a polyanionic structure which may regulate the passage of solutes and water through the endothelium, readily binds cationic ferritin (CF). In normal, nonexchange-transfused rats, however, only 7.5% and 6.0% of the luminal plasma membrane and 7.5% and 5.0% of vesicle diaphragms on the thick and thin side of pulmonary capillaries, respectively, bound cationic ferritin. With the graded removal of circulating proteins by exchange transfusion with fluorocarbon emulsion, up to 89 and 82% of the luminal surface, and 76 and 73% of vesicle diaphragms on the thick and thin sides, respectively, bound CF. Although the extent of binding on the thin side was consistently less than on the thick side, the difference was not statistically significant. The extensive binding of CF to the glycocalyx in totally exchange-transfused rats was completely reversible upon addition of lyophilized rat serum protein to the perfusate. These data suggest that in vivo anionic sites of the endothelial glycocalyx are partially masked by adsorbed plasma proteins.  相似文献   

16.
To investigate the chemical nature of the cationic ferritin (CF)- binding sites of the differentiated microdomains of the capillary endothelium, the vasculature of the mouse pancreas and intestinal mucosa was perfused in situ with neuraminidase, hyaluronidase, chondroitinase ABC, heparinase, and three proteases: trypsin, papain, and pronase. Proteases of broad specificity removed all anionic sites, suggesting that the latter are contributed by acid glycoproteins or proteoglycans. Neuraminidase, hyaluronidase, and chondroitinase ABC reduced the density of CF-binding sites on the plasmalemma proper, but had no effect on either coated pits or fenestral diaphragms. Heparinase removed CF-binding sites from fenestral diaphragms and had no effect on coated pits. Taken together, these results indicate that the anionic sites of the fenestral diaphragms are contributed primarily by heparan sulfate and/or heparin, whereas those of the plasmalemma proper are of mixed chemical nature. The membranes and diaphragms of plasmalemmal vesicles and transendothelial channels do not bind CF in control specimens; this condition is not affected by the enzymic treatments mentioned above.  相似文献   

17.
The cell surface of a restrictive fenestrated endothelium   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The choriocapillaris is one example of a capillary bed lined by a fenestrated endothelium that is restrictive to exogenous tracers and endogenous plasma proteins. In this study we have examined the distribution of cell-surface monosaccharides utilizing biotinylated lectin-avidin ferritin cytochemistry. Receptors for wheat germ agglutinin were localized to the plasmalemma and diaphragms of some fenestrae, vesicles, and channels at the luminal endothelial front in amounts greater than seen for the other lectins employed. The absence of labeling following inhibition with N-acetylglucosamine and after tissue digestion with N-acetylhexosaminidase, but not after neuraminidase indicated that this lectin marked N-acetylglucosamine residues and not sialic acid. Wheat germ agglutinin receptors were not affected by pronase E or trypsin digestion, but were partially removed by proteinase K. The latter also removed many fenestral diaphragms. Wheat germ agglutinin receptors were cleaved with endoglycosidase D. The combined results indicate that the wheat germ agglutinin receptor is of the low-mannose type and part of a protein with hydrophobic properties. Receptors for concanavalin A (mannose) and Ricinus communis agglutinin (galactose) were also localized to the plasmalemma and endothelial diaphragms. The examination of sections at different tilt angles revealed that these lectins bound to the endothelium in a non-random distribution, encircling diaphragms of fenestrae and channels. Soybean agglutinin (N-acetylgalactosamine) marked endothelial structures sparsely. Following digestion with pronase E or trypsin, receptor sugars for the latter three lectins were completely removed, indicating their presence on protease susceptible glycoproteins. These findings demonstrate that the endothelium of the choriocapillaris bears carbohydrate moieties that are different than those described for permeable fenestrated endothelia.  相似文献   

18.
Defouw LM  Defouw DO 《Tissue & cell》2001,33(2):135-140
During angiogenesis in the chick chorioallantoic membrane (CAM), microvascular proliferation continues through day 12 of the 18-day CAM lifespan. Up to day 4.5, the neovascularization is associated with endothelial hyperpermeability and differentiation of restrictive barrier function occurs abruptly at day 5.0. Although exogenous activation of cAMP/protein kinase A (PKA) signaling served to decrease macromolecular extravasation at day 4.5, endogenous signaling cascades responsible for the temporal hyperpermeability remain uncertain. Here, we evaluated protein kinase C (PKC) function in the CAM endothelium at day 4.5 and day 5.0. The specific, broad-based PKC inhibitor calphostin C reduced basal levels of FITC-dextran 40 extravasation at day 4.5. Bisindolymaleimide (BIM), which inhibits selective PKC isoforms, also reduced temporal FITC-dextran 40 efflux, but to a lesser extent than calphostin C. Activation of PKC activity by phorbol-12, 13-didecanoate (PDD) or phorbol-12, 13-dibutyrate (PDBu) at day 5.0 served to partially de-differentiate barrier properties of the angiogenic endothelium. The associated elevation of FITC-dextran 40 extravasation occurred without interendothelial gap formation along the junctional clefts. Together, these results are consistent with the interpretation that PKC activity contributes, in part, to CAM endothelial hyperpermeability at day 4.5. Furthermore, down-regulation of PKC signaling correlates temporally with the ontogeny of restrictive barrier function at day 5.0.  相似文献   

19.
Rüffer C  Strey A  Janning A  Kim KS  Gerke V 《Biochemistry》2004,43(18):5360-5369
Endothelial cell-cell contacts control the vascular permeability, thereby regulating the flow of solutes, macromolecules, and leukocytes between blood vessels and interstitial space. Because of specific needs, the endothelial permeability differs significantly between the tight blood-brain barrier endothelium and the more permeable endothelial lining of the non-brain microvasculature. Most likely, such differences are due to a differing architecture of the respective interendothelial cell contacts. However, while the molecules and junctional complexes of macrovascular endothelial cells and the blood-brain barrier endothelium are fairly well characterized, much less is known about the organization of intercellular contacts of microvascular endothelium. Toward this end, we developed a combined cross-linking and immunoprecipitation protocol which enabled us to map nearest neighbor interactions of junctional proteins in the human dermal microvascular endothelial cell line HMEC-1. We show that proteins typically located in tight or adherens junctions of epithelial cells are in the proximity in HMEC-1 cells. This contrasts with the separation of the different types of junctions observed in polarized epithelial cells and "tight" endothelial layers of the blood-brain barrier and argues for a need of the specific junctional contacts in microvascular endothelium possibly required to support an efficient transendothelial migration of leukocytes.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Pericytes are cells of mesodermal origin which are closely associated with the microvasculature. Despite numerous studies little is known about their function. We have studied the relationship between pericytes and the endothelium in rat myocardial capillaries employing ultrastructural and immunogold techniques. 14% of the subendothelial cell membrane is covered by comparatively small pericytic cell processes. About half of these processes are completely embedded in baseement membrane material, whereas the remaining half forms closer contacts with the endothelium. These contacts are devoid of anti-laminin immunogold label, a marker for basement membranes. A small fraction of these contacts has been identified as tight junctions resembling those seen between endothelial cells in capillaries of the same tissue. The remaining majority of junctions reveals a cleft of approximately 18 nm between the apposed membranes in which a succession of cleft-spanning structures can often bedetected. It was also found that pericytic processes are preferentially located close to interendothelial junctions. We suggest that the high frequency of intimate junctions between pericytes and the endothelium and the preferential localisation near paracellular clefts may have functional significance.  相似文献   

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