| Literature DB >> 20701757 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Much of our current understanding of microvascular permeability is based on the findings of classic experimental studies of blood capillary permeability to various-sized lipid-insoluble endogenous and non-endogenous macromolecules. According to the classic small pore theory of microvascular permeability, which was formulated on the basis of the findings of studies on the transcapillary flow rates of various-sized systemically or regionally perfused endogenous macromolecules, transcapillary exchange across the capillary wall takes place through a single population of small pores that are approximately 6 nm in diameter; whereas, according to the dual pore theory of microvascular permeability, which was formulated on the basis of the findings of studies on the accumulation of various-sized systemically or regionally perfused non-endogenous macromolecules in the locoregional tissue lymphatic drainages, transcapillary exchange across the capillary wall also takes place through a separate population of large pores, or capillary leaks, that are between 24 and 60 nm in diameter. The classification of blood capillary types on the basis of differences in the physiologic upper limits of pore size to transvascular flow highlights the differences in the transcapillary exchange routes for the transvascular transport of endogenous and non-endogenous macromolecules across the capillary walls of different blood capillary types.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20701757 PMCID: PMC2928191 DOI: 10.1186/2040-2384-2-14
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Angiogenes Res ISSN: 2040-2384
Classification of non-sinusoidal non-fenestrated blood capillary microvasculature
| NON-SINUSOIDAL CAPILLARY TYPE | Primary anatomic sites of transvascular flow | Determinants of physiologic pore size | Physiologic upper limit of pore size | Representative tissue microvascular beds |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| •Non-fenestrated endothelial cells •Continuous anionic basement membrane rich in sulphated proteoglycans[ | ||||
| •Zona Occludens interendothelial cell junctions in series constitute an absolute barrier to the transvascular flow of macromolecules | •Retinal [ | |||
| •Macula Occludens interendothelial cell junctions in series constitute a relative barrier to the transvascular flow of macromolecules | •Skin | |||
Classification of non-sinusoidal fenestrated blood capillary microvasculature
| NON-SINUSOIDAL CAPILLARY TYPE | Primary anatomic sites of transvascular flow | Determinants of physiologic pore size | Physiologic upper limit of pore size | Representative tissue microvascular beds |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| •Fenestrated endothelial cells •Continuous anionic basement membrane rich in sulphated proteoglycans[ | ||||
| •Arc widths of open spaces devoid of membranous components (central diaphragm and septae) delineate the upper limits of pore size | •Skin | |||
| •Narrow interspacing of glycocalyx matrix fibers is the barrier to the transcapillary flow of macromolecules larger than ~15 nm in diameter | •Kidney Glomerulus [ | |||
Classification of sinusoidal reticuloendothelial blood capillary microvasculature
| SINUSOIDAL CAPILLARY TYPE | Primary anatomic sites of transvascular flow | Ultrastructural determinants of transvascular transport | Physiologic upper limit of pore size |
|---|---|---|---|
| •Endothelial cells w/high levels of phago-endocytosis[ | |||
| •Absence of basement membrane underlying fenestral openings and relative lack of glycocalyx matrix fibers in the vicinity of the fenestral openings renders fenestrae permeable to macromolecules as large as the diameters of the fenestrae themselves [ | |||
| •Transvascular flow of macromolecules smaller than ~5 nm into the bone marrow interstitial space across maculae occludens interendothelial junctions | |||
Classification of sinusoidal non-reticuloendothelial blood capillary microvasculature
| SINUSOIDAL CAPILLARY TYPE | Primary anatomic sites of transvascular flow | Ultrastructural determinants of transvascular transport | Physiologic upper limit of pore size |
|---|---|---|---|
| •Endothelial cells w/low levels of phago-endocytosis[ | |||
| •Terminal arterial capillary network of the splenic red pulp reticulum constitutes the primary mode of splenic filtration | |||
| •Few direct connections exist between splenic arterioles and venous capillaries and constitutes the minor pathway in splenic filtration | |||
Figure 1Schematic depictions of the capillary wall ultrastructure in different blood capillary microvasculatures. Shown in red are the anatomic sites in the capillary walls of the respective blood capillary types that are the primary pathways for transvascular flow and transport across the capillary wall, and as such, constitute the ultrastructural determinants of the physiologic upper limit of pore size to transvascular flow. The green pillars that emanate from the luminal surface of the endothelial lining represent the individual mucopolysaccharide fibers of the endothelial glycocalyx layer (EGL), and the orange hatched region that encircles the abluminal surface of the endothelial cell lining represents the collagenous basement layer (interna and externa). As depicted in the schematics, the capillary walls of the different types of non-sinusoidal blood capillaries are proficient in all three layers (panels A, B and C), which is not the case for the capillary walls of the sinusoidal blood capillaries of myeloid (red) bone marrow and the liver (panels D and E). Also depicted in panels D and E are the 'bristle-coated pits' of myeloid bone marrow and hepatic sinusoidal blood capillary the reticuloendothelial cells, which constitute the anatomic sites at which the phago-endocytosis of non-endogenous macromolecules occurs.
A. Non-sinusoidal non-fenestrated blood capillaries
B. Non-sinusoidal fenestrated blood capillaries with diaphragmed fenestrae
C. Non-sinusoidal fenestrated blood capillaries with open 'non-diaphragmed' fenestrae
D. Sinusoidal reticuloendothelial non-fenestrated blood capillaries of myeloid (red) bone marrow
E. Sinusoidal reticuloendothelial fenestrated blood capillaries of the liver
(Please view Additional files 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 for individual Figure 1 panels A, B, C, D and E with detailed panel descriptions)