Permeability of Pulmonary Vascular Endothelium

Author(s):  
A. P. Fishman ◽  
G. G. Pietra
2015 ◽  
Vol 14 (5) ◽  
pp. 7290.2015.00003 ◽  
Author(s):  
François Harel ◽  
Xavier Levac ◽  
Quang T. Nguyen ◽  
Myriam Létourneau ◽  
Sophie Marcil ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
1985 ◽  
Vol 66 (6) ◽  
pp. 1379-1383 ◽  
Author(s):  
B Meyrick ◽  
RJ Workman ◽  
MG Frazer ◽  
M Okamoto ◽  
JE Hazlewood ◽  
...  

Abstract Whether migration of granulocytes across pulmonary vascular endothelium in the absence of structural evidence of endothelial injury causes increased production of thromboxane or prostacyclin is not known. Using bovine pulmonary artery intimal explants mounted in Boyden chambers and homologous separated granulocytes, concentrations of thromboxane B2 and 6-keto-PGF1 alpha in the upper-well fluid were measured by radioimmunoassay over a three-hour period under the following conditions: (1) granulocyte chemotaxis (zymosan-activated plasma in the lower well, granulocytes in the upper well); (2) unstimulated granulocyte migration (serum or plasma in the lower well, granulocytes in the upper well); (3) granulocyte activation without migration (zymosan-activated plasma and granulocytes in the upper well); (4) granulocyte chemotaxis in the absence of endothelium (identical to condition 1 above except that endothelium was scraped from the explant surface); and (5) explants incubated in the absence of granulocytes. Minimal increases in thromboxane B2 concentrations in upper-well fluid occurred under all conditions. In contrast, granulocyte chemotaxis was accompanied by large increases in concentrations of 6-keto-PGF1 alpha evident by two hours of incubation and increasing markedly by three hours, to 524.3 +/- 69.0 ng/mL (m +/- SEM). Unstimulated migration of granulocytes toward serum or plasma and granulocyte activation without migration were accompanied, at three hours, by more modest increases in 6-keto-PGF1 alpha (296.5 +/- 46.4; 128.0 +/- 38.6, and 236.7 +/- 47.0 ng/mL, respectively) and, in the absence of granulocytes or in the absence of endothelium, only minimal increases in this prostacyclin metabolite occurred (137.2 +/- 16.9 and 53.9 +/- 12.6 ng/mL, respectively). The large rises in prostacyclin metabolite occurred at a time when the majority of granulocytes had migrated through the endothelial layer rather than during their adherence or transendothelial passage. We conclude that chemotaxis of granulocytes through pulmonary vascular endothelium causes endothelial production of large amounts of prostacyclin, but this occurs late in the chemotactic process, after granulocytes have transversed the endothelium.


1997 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 267-272 ◽  
Author(s):  
Z-Q Han ◽  
H A Coppock ◽  
D M Smith ◽  
S Van Noorden ◽  
M W Makgoba ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT An abundant, seven trans-membrane domain receptor related to the calcitonin receptor has been studied by a number of groups without identification of its ligand. A recent report claimed that the receptor was a type 1 CGRP receptor (Aiyar et al J. Biol. Chem. 271 11325-11329 (1996)). We have studied the equivalent rat sequence in transfected cells. When expressed in 293 cells the receptor interacts with CGRP and adrenomedullin with KD values of 1.2 nM for CGRP and 11 nM for adrenomedullin. Both ligands cause an elevation of intracellular cAMP with EC50 values of 4 nM and 20 nM respectively and these effects are inhibited by the antagonist CGRP8-37. The receptor is expressed at high levels in the pulmonary vascular endothelium. Both the pharmacological data and the localisation are consistent with the conclusion that the orphan receptor is a type 1 CGRP receptor. However, when expressed in COS-7 cells, no receptor activity could be demonstrated suggesting that 293 cells contain a factor necessary for functional receptor expression.


Blood ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 80 (6) ◽  
pp. 1565-1575 ◽  
Author(s):  
KL Yong ◽  
PM Rowles ◽  
KG Patterson ◽  
DC Linch

Abstract Granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) causes upregulation of neutrophil surface CD11b/CD18 expression, and enhances the adhesion of neutrophils to cultured human endothelial cells in vitro. Systemic administration of GM-CSF results in a rapid, transient decrease in circulating phagocyte numbers. Using a nonhuman primate model (Cynomolgus), we provide histologic evidence that this transient leukopenia is associated with the margination of neutrophils in the pulmonary microcirculation. In four animals receiving 2 to 15 micrograms/kg recombinant human GM-CSF (rhGM-CSF), light microscopic sections of lung contained 36 +/- 8, 17 +/- 7, 21 +/- 6, and 15 +/- 8 (mean +/- SD, n = 20) neutrophils within a graticule grid, as compared with two control animals receiving saline injections whose lung sections contained 2.1 +/- 1.6 and 3.1 +/- 2.1 (mean +/- SD, n = 20) neutrophils within the same grid. Scanning electron microscopy shows activated leukocytes adherent to pulmonary vascular endothelium, but no morphologic evidence of endothelial damage, and no migration of cells into the extravascular space. Margination is associated with an increase in surface expression of CD11b/CD18 on circulating phagocytes, which could contribute to the adhesion to capillary endothelial cells, but CD11b/CD18 levels remain elevated even when demargination is complete. In vitro, monoclonal antibodies (MoAbs) to CD18 and CD11b were able to inhibit neutrophil aggregation and adhesion to endothelium. FMLP-induced neutrophil aggregation was inhibited by 39.8% +/- 11.5% and 44.8% +/- 12.3%, respectively, by MoAbs to CD18 and CD11b (P less than .0005, n = 4 for both); a similar effect was demonstrated on TPA-induced aggregation. MoAb CD18 reduced the adhesion of unstimulated neutrophils to endothelium by 44% (P less than .01, n = 7), and inhibited the amount of GM-CSF-stimulated adhesion by 74% (P less than .001, n = 7), while MoAb to CD11b produced a reduction of unstimulated neutrophil adhesion by 30%, and of GM-CSF-stimulated adhesion by 40% (P less than .01, n = 5, for both). However, when administered in vivo, MoAb CD18 produced only a small, albeit significant, amelioration of GM-CSF-induced margination in vivo, while MoAb CD11b was without effect. These results show that GM-CSF-induced transient leukopenia is associated with enhanced neutrophil adherence to pulmonary vascular endothelium, but suggest that the beta 2 leukocyte integrins CD11/CD18 play only a minor role in this process.


1988 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 28-32 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Docci ◽  
C. Delvecchio ◽  
F. Turci ◽  
L Baldrati ◽  
C. Gollini

The effects of different dialyzer membranes on serum concentration of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) and white blood cells during hemodialysis were examined on a cross-over basis in 20 chronically uremic patients. Hemodialysis with cuprophane membranes was associated with a significant (p < 0.001) fall in the mean leukocyte count during the 1st hour of treatment. The use of polymethylmetacrylate membranes resulted in a more attenuated form of leukopenia and with polyacrylonitrile membranes no change was observed during hemodialysis. Hemodialysis with each membrane caused a comparable, significant (p < 0.005) increase in serum ACE, independent of the degree of leukopenia but significantly (p < 0.001) correlated with the increases in serum proteins. We conclude that this increase in serum ACE concentration after hemodialysis does not reflect acute damage of the pulmonary vascular endothelium during treatment and most probably is a result of hemoconcentration. Therefore, serum ACE analysis is not an indicator of dialyzer membrane biocompatibility.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document