| Literature DB >> 34540847 |
Abstract
The endothelial glycocalyx (eGlx) is thought to be the primary macromolecular filter for fluid flux out of the vasculature. This filter maintains the higher protein concentration within the vessel lumen relative to the tissue. Whilst the arguments for the eGlx being the size filter are convincing the structural evidence has been limited to specialized stains of perfusion fixed tissue, which are further processed for resin embedding for transmission electron microscopy. The staining and processing of the delicate pore structure has left many researchers struggling to interpret the observed surface coat. Previous work has alluded to a 19.5 nm spacing between fibers; however, whilst repeatable it does not give an eGlx pore size consistent with known glycosaminoglycan (GAG) molecular structure due to the required fiber thickness of >10 nm. Here a new interpretation is proposed based on the likelihood that the electron micrographs of are often of collapsed eGlx. The 19.5 nm spacing measured may therefore be the core protein of the proteoglycans (PGs) with the GAGs wrapped up around them rather than in an expanded in vivo state. The concept is explored to determine that this is indeed consistent with experimental measurements of permeability if the syndecans are predominately dimerized. Further an alteration of core protein lattice from hexagonal packing to square packing dramatically changes the permeability which could be facilitated via known mechanisms such as transient actin binding.Entities:
Keywords: Starling hypothesis; glycosaminoglycans; heparan sulfate; macromolecular transport; proteoglycan; vascular permeabilty
Year: 2021 PMID: 34540847 PMCID: PMC8442954 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2021.734661
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1Schematic of the proposed model using the square lattice example. (A) Looking to the wall from the lumen the electron microscopy visualizes the proteoglycan (PG) core protein with the glycosaminoglycan (GAG) fibers collapsed around them. This gives an inter-fiber spacing (Old b) that has been measured experimentally as 19.5 nm, and an area associated with each fiber for the solvent and solute to pass. (B) The red GAG fibers (in this example four per core protein), are unraveled and spaced accordingly (in this case also into square ordering). Each fiber in this example has of the associated area to the PG core protein, and a new spacing (New b). (C) The orange free space (F) for the purple solute is a proportion of the free space for water which has the orange and the additional blue space. The water is only excluded by the fiber diameter. This proportion is used to estimate the solute reflection coefficient. (D) Is a side view of the endothelial glycocalyx (eGlx) with the PG core protein spaced as “Old b” or 19.5 nm. There is now a new spacing “New b” between GAG fibers and a different fiber diameter to calculate the proportions of free space.
FIGURE 2The physiological albumin reflection coefficient fits well with a hexagonally packed dimerized PG core with a total of ≥6 GAG chains with a diameter of 1.5 nm (including charge effects). (A) Variation of reflection coefficient with the number of GAG chains per PG core structure. The data is depicted for hexagonal and square core organization (Hex- and SQ-, respectively) with the overlaying GAG chain organization hexagonal (Hex) or square (SQ). (B) As A but demonstrating the dependance of reflection coefficient on fiber spacing with six GAG chains per core structure. The physiological reflection coefficient is the grayed area. The error bars are for a 0.5 nm (lower reflection coefficient) and a 3 nm (higher reflection coefficient) fiber diameter.