Structural mechanisms of acute VEGF effect on microvessel permeability.
Bingmei M Fu, Shang Shen
Index: Am. J. Physiol. Heart Circ. Physiol. 284(6) , H2124-35, (2003)
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Abstract
To investigate the ultrastructural mechanisms of acute microvessel hyperpermeability by vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), we combined a mathematical model (J Biomech Eng 116: 502-513, 1994) with experimental data of the effect of VEGF on microvessel hydraulic conductivity (L(p)) and permeability of various-sized solutes. We examined the effect of VEGF on microvessel permeability to a small solute (sodium fluorescein, Stokes radius 0.45 nm), an intermediate solute (alpha-lactalbumin, Stokes radius 2.01 nm), and a large solute [albumin (BSA), Stokes radius 3.5 nm]. Exposure to 1 nM VEGF transiently increased apparent permeability to 2.3, 3.3, and 6.2 times their baseline values for sodium fluorescein, alpha-lactalbumin, and BSA, respectively, within 30 s, and all returned to control within 2 min. On the basis of L(p) (DO Bates and FE Curry. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 271: H2520-H2528, 1996) and permeability data, the prediction from the model suggested that the most likely structural changes in the interendothelial cleft induced by VEGF would be a approximately 2.5-fold increase in its opening width and partial degradation of the surface glycocalyx.
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