Transport pathways for macromolecules in the aortic endothelium: I. Transendothelial channels revealed by three‐dimensional reconstruction using serial sections

1993 
Three-dimensional organization of structures labeled by horseradish peroxidase as a tracer molecule in rat aortic endothelium was examined to elucidate the transport pathways for macromolecules. Aortic endothelium was divisible morphologically into four distinct parts, i.e., the parajunctional region (JR), peripheral region (PR), organelle region (OR), and nuclear region (NR). Almost all vesicles, intercellular clefts, and phagosomes were labeled by horseradish peroxidase. Peroxidase-positive vesicles tended to gather in the PR, occasional JR, and the upper part of the NR. Ultrathin serial micrographs revealed the transcellular channels composed of vesicles in the PR and JR, and the paracellular channels composed of the intercellular cleft without constrictions of tight and gap junctions. Transcellular channels were subdivided into three morphologically different types, where not only vesicles but invagination of abluminal membrane and intercellular cleft occasionally participated in their formation. Three-dimensional reconstructions from three series of consecutive electron micrographs revealed that almost all peroxidase-positive vesicles were connected directly or indirectly with the cell surface. These results indicate that the transcellular and paracellular channels are the transport pathways for macromolecules in the aortic endothelium and may suggest that the “shuttle” hypothesis is unsuitable to explain transport system for macromolecules because it postulates the existence of many free vesicles in the cytoplasm. © 1993 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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