Endothelial cells as early sensors of pulmonary interstitial edema

2004 
We studied responses of endothelial and epithelial cells in the thin portion of the air-blood barrier to a rise in interstitial pressure caused by an increase in extravascular water (interstitial edema) obtained in anesthetized rabbits receiving saline infusion (0.5 ml·kg−1·min−1 for 3 h). We obtained morphometric analyses of the cells and of their microenvironment (electron microscopy); furthermore, we also studied in lung tissue extracts the biochemical alterations of proteins responsible for signal transduction (PKC, caveolin-1) and cell-cell adhesion (CD31) and of proteins involved in membrane-to-cytoskeleton linkage (α-tubulin and β-tubulin). In endothelial cells, we observed a folding of the plasma membrane with an increase in cell surface area, a doubling of plasmalemma vesicular density, and an increase in cell volume. Minor morphological changes were observed in epithelial cells. Edema did not affect the total plasmalemma amount of PKC, β-tubulin, and caveolin-1, but α-tubulin and CD-31 increased...
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