| Literature DB >> 33937360 |
Andrew B Haymet1,2, Nicole Bartnikowski1,3, Emily S Wood1,2, Michael P Vallely4, Angela McBride5,6, Sophie Yacoub6,7, Scott B Biering8, Eva Harris8, Jacky Y Suen1,2, John F Fraser1,2.
Abstract
All human cells are coated by a surface layer of proteoglycans, glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) and plasma proteins, called the glycocalyx. The glycocalyx transmits shear stress to the cytoskeleton of endothelial cells, maintains a selective permeability barrier, and modulates adhesion of blood leukocytes and platelets. Major components of the glycocalyx, including syndecans, heparan sulfate, and hyaluronan, are shed from the endothelial surface layer during conditions including ischaemia and hypoxia, sepsis, atherosclerosis, diabetes, renal disease, and some viral infections. Studying mechanisms of glycocalyx damage in vivo can be challenging due to the complexity of immuno-inflammatory responses which are inextricably involved. Previously, both static as well as perfused in vitro models have studied the glycocalyx, and have reported either imaging data, assessment of barrier function, or interactions of blood components with the endothelial monolayer. To date, no model has simultaneously incorporated all these features at once, however such a model would arguably enhance the study of vasculopathic processes. This review compiles a series of current in vitro models described in the literature that have targeted the glycocalyx layer, their limitations, and potential opportunities for further developments in this field.Entities:
Keywords: endothelial surface layer; endothelium; glycocalyx; vascular; vasculopathy
Year: 2021 PMID: 33937360 PMCID: PMC8079726 DOI: 10.3389/fcvm.2021.647086
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cardiovasc Med ISSN: 2297-055X
Summary of in vitro models that directly study glycocalyx pathophysiology.
| Diebel et al. ( | HUVECs | Static | Cell media | Cells exposed to hydrogen peroxide and/or adrenaline to stimulate post-trauma/haemorrhagic shock. The effect of early administration of tranexamic acid (TXA) on mitigating endothelial damage was evaluated | Antifibrinolytic and other protective effects of TXA administration on endothelial injury were time-dependent, supporting the concept that clinical efficacy of tranexamic acid requires “early administration.” | ||
| Martin et al. ( | HUVECs | Static | Cell media | HUVECs were treated with varying concentrations of noraderenaline and adrenaline, and exposed to simulated shock conditions | Noradrenaline induced a fibrinolytic state with elevated tPA levels compared to adrenaline. Both degraded the glycocalyx, however adrenaline appeared to produce more severe endothelial instability as demonstrated by increased APO-2 levels | ||
| Puerta-Guardo et al. ( | Human pulmonary, dermal, and umbilical vein microvascular endothelial cells | Static | Cell media | Confluent human pulmonary microvascular endothelial cell (HPMECs) monolayers grown on gelatin-coated coverslips were exposed to different concentrations of Dengue virus (DENV) non-structural protein 1 (NS1) | DENV NS1 disrupted the endothelial glycocalyx on human pulmonary microvascular endothelial cells, inducing degradation of sialic acid and shedding of heparan sulfate proteoglycans. NS1 also activated cathepsin L, a lysosomal cysteine proteinase, in endothelial cells, which activated heparanase via enzymatic cleavage | ||
| Puerta-Guardo et al. ( | Human pulmonary, dermal, umbilical vein, brain, and liver endothelial cells | Static | Cell media | NS1 proteins added to confluent monolayers of human endothelial cells, and amount of NS1 bound to the surface of the endothelial cell monolayers was determined by immunofluorescence microscopy. Alterations in permeability assessed using TEER and solute flux assays | NS1 proteins from dengue, Zika, West Nile, Japanese encephalitis, and yellow fever viruses selectively alter the permeability of monolayers of endothelial cell lines derived from distinct human tissues. Flavivirus NS1 proteins modulate endothelial permeability in a tissue-specific manner both | ||
| Wang et al. ( | HUVECs | Static | Cell media | Investigation of effect of platelet microparticles (PMPs) in diabetes on aortic vascular endothelial injury. | Increased PMPs levels contributed to aortic vascular endothelial injuries in diabetes through activating the mTORC1 pathway | ||
| Butler et al. ( | Human glomerular endothelial cells | 10 dyn/cm2 shear stress using orbital shaker | Cell media, with added mannitol or NaCl (to avoid osmotic stress) | Investigation of the effect of salt and aldosterone exposure on pathologic remodeling of the glomerular glycocalyx. | Reduction in cell surface glycocalyx components (heparan sulfate and syndecan-4) and disrupted shear sensing was observed consistent with damage of the glycocalyx, when cells were exposed to 0.1 nM aldosterone and 145 mMol NaCl. | ||
| Glasner et al. ( | Human dermal endothelial cells; human pulmonary microvascular endothelial cells | Static | Cell media | ||||
| Ebong et al. ( | Bovine aortic (BAEC) and rat fat pad endothelial cells | Static | Cell media | Cells subjected to conventional or rapid freezing/freeze substitution transmission electron microscopy (RF/FS TEM) | RF/FS-TEM revealed impressively thick bovine aortic endothelial cell glycocalyx of ~11 μm and rat fat pad endothelial glycocalyx of ~5 μm | ||
| McDonald et al. ( | Human abdominal aortic endothelial cells | Steady state, uniform, laminar shear stress | Cell media | Cells seeded within 3D straight tube models and subjected to 24 h of 10 dyn/cm2 laminar shear stress, investigating the role of glycocalyx in leukocyte adhesion under flow | With enzymatic degradation of the glycocalyx, endothelial cells developed a proinflammatory phenotype when exposed to uniform steady shear stress leading to an increase in leukocyte adhesion | ||
| Potter et al. ( | HUVECs | Steady state perfusion (gravity-induced pressure head) | Cell media | Murine cremasteric muscle and vasculature exteriorized under anesthesia | Microviscometric analysis of μ-PIV data determines the hydrodynamically relevant glycocalyx thickness, which may be more physiologically relevant and meaningful than the molecular or structural dimension of the glycocalyx measured using direct visualization methods | ||
| Yao et al. ( | BAECs, HUVECs | Steady state perfusion (15 dyn/cm2) | Cell media | Role of the glycocalyx in both endothelial cell short-term and long-term mechano-transduction responses by using heparinase III to cleave heparan sulfate GAGs on the cell surface | Removing the glycocalyx by using the specific enzyme heparinase III, endothelial cells no longer align under flow after 24 h and they proliferate as if there were no flow present. Glycocalyx is necessary for the endothelial cells to respond to fluid shear, and the glycocalyx itself is modulated by the flow | ||
| Bai and Wang | HUVECs | Steady state perfusion (12 dyn/cm2 for 24 h) | Cell media | Effects of shear stress on the spatial distribution of the glycocalyx on endothelial cell membranes | Following 24 h recovery under shear flow, the glycocalyx reappears predominantly near the edge of endothelial cells. Static and shear flow conditions result in notable changes in the spatial recovery of the glycocalyx, but the difference is not statistically significant | ||
Figure 1Areas for potential enhancement for existing in vitro benchtop models studying glycocalyx pathophysiology. Acknowledgment: .