Literature DB >> 19587146

Solute partitioning and filtration by extracellular matrices.

William H Fissell1, Christina L Hofmann, Nicholas Ferrell, Lisa Schnell, Anna Dubnisheva, Andrew L Zydney, Peter D Yurchenco, Shuvo Roy.   

Abstract

The physiology of glomerular filtration remains mechanistically obscure despite its importance in disease. The correspondence between proteinuria and foot process effacement suggests podocytes as the locus of the filtration barrier. If so, retained macromolecules ought to accumulate at the filtration barrier, an effect called concentration polarization. Literature data indicate macromolecule concentrations decrease from subendothelial to subepithelial glomerular basement membrane (GBM), as would be expected if the GBM were itself the filter. The objective of this study was to obtain insights into the possible role of the GBM in protein retention by performing fundamental experimental and theoretical studies on the properties of three model gels. Solute partitioning and filtration through thin gels of a commercially available laminin-rich extracellular matrix, Matrigel, were measured using a polydisperse polysaccharide tracer molecule, Ficoll 70. Solute partitioning into laminin gels and lens basement membrane (LBM) were measured using Ficoll 70. A novel model of a laminin gel was numerically simulated, as well as a mixed structure-random-fiber model for LBM. Experimental partitioning was predicted by numerical simulations. Sieving coefficients through thin gels of Matrigel were size dependent and strongly flux dependent. The observed flux dependence arose from compression of the gel in response to the applied pressure. Gel compression may alter solute partitioning into extracellular matrix at physiologic pressures present in the glomerular capillary. This suggests a physical mechanism coupling podocyte structure to permeability characteristics of the GBM.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19587146      PMCID: PMC2775571          DOI: 10.1152/ajprenal.00162.2009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Physiol Renal Physiol        ISSN: 1522-1466


  53 in total

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Journal:  Kidney Int       Date:  2007-01-17       Impact factor: 10.612

5.  Pressure-permeability relationships in basement membrane: effects of static and dynamic pressures.

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Journal:  Kidney Int       Date:  1975-10       Impact factor: 10.612

8.  Altered anionic GBM components in monoclonal antibody against slit diaphragm-injected proteinuric rats.

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10.  Laminin compensation in collagen alpha3(IV) knockout (Alport) glomeruli contributes to permeability defects.

Authors:  Dale R Abrahamson; Kathryn Isom; Eileen Roach; Larysa Stroganova; Adrian Zelenchuk; Jeffrey H Miner; Patricia L St John
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1.  Effects of pressure and electrical charge on macromolecular transport across bovine lens basement membrane.

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Review 4.  Renal albumin filtration: alternative models to the standard physical barriers.

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5.  VEGF165b overexpression restores normal glomerular water permeability in VEGF164-overexpressing adult mice.

Authors:  Sebastian Oltean; Christopher R Neal; Athina Mavrou; Panisha Patel; Thomas Ahad; Chloe Alsop; Thomas Lee; Karen Sison; Yan Qiu; Steven J Harper; David O Bates; Andrew H J Salmon
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Review 6.  Review series: The cell biology of renal filtration.

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  6 in total

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