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PERMEABILITY OF MUSCLE CAPILLARIES TO EXOGENOUS MYOGLOBIN

Whale skeletal muscle myoglobin (mol wt 17,800; molecular dimensions 25 x 34 x 42 Å) was used as a probe molecule for the pore systems of muscle capillaries. Diaphragms of Wistar-Furth rats were fixed in situ at intervals up to 4 h after the intravenous injection of the tracer, and myoglobin was loc...

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Autores principales: Simionescu, Nicolae, Simionescu, Maia, Palade, George E.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1973
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2108986/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/4696549
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author Simionescu, Nicolae
Simionescu, Maia
Palade, George E.
author_facet Simionescu, Nicolae
Simionescu, Maia
Palade, George E.
author_sort Simionescu, Nicolae
collection PubMed
description Whale skeletal muscle myoglobin (mol wt 17,800; molecular dimensions 25 x 34 x 42 Å) was used as a probe molecule for the pore systems of muscle capillaries. Diaphragms of Wistar-Furth rats were fixed in situ at intervals up to 4 h after the intravenous injection of the tracer, and myoglobin was localized in the tissue by a peroxidase reaction. Gel filtration of plasma samples proved that myoglobin molecules remained in circulation in native monomeric form. At 30–35 s postinjection, the tracer marked ∼75% of the plasmalemmal vesicles on the blood front of the endothelium, 15% of those located inside and none of those on the tissue front. At 45 s, the labeling of vesicles in the inner group reached 60% but remained nil for those on the tissue front. Marked vesicles appeared on the latter past 45 s and their frequency increased to ∼80% by 60–75 s, concomitantly with the appearance of myoglobin in the pericapillary spaces. Significant regional heterogeneity in initial labeling was found in the different segments of the endothelium (i.e., perinuclear cytoplasm, organelle region, cell periphery, and parajunctional zone). Up to 60 s, the intercellular junctions and spaces of the endothelium were free of myoglobin reaction product; thereafter, the latter was detected in the distal part of the intercellular spaces in concentration generally equal to or lower than that prevailing in the adjacent pericapillary space. The findings indicate that myoglobin molecules cross the endothelium of muscle capillaries primarily via plasmalemmal vesicles. Since a molecule of this size is supposed to exit through both pore systems, our results confirm the earlier conclusion that the plasmalemmal vesicles represent the large pore system; in addition, they suggest that the same structures are, at least in part, the structural equivalent of the small pore system of this type of capillaries.
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spelling pubmed-21089862008-05-01 PERMEABILITY OF MUSCLE CAPILLARIES TO EXOGENOUS MYOGLOBIN Simionescu, Nicolae Simionescu, Maia Palade, George E. J Cell Biol Article Whale skeletal muscle myoglobin (mol wt 17,800; molecular dimensions 25 x 34 x 42 Å) was used as a probe molecule for the pore systems of muscle capillaries. Diaphragms of Wistar-Furth rats were fixed in situ at intervals up to 4 h after the intravenous injection of the tracer, and myoglobin was localized in the tissue by a peroxidase reaction. Gel filtration of plasma samples proved that myoglobin molecules remained in circulation in native monomeric form. At 30–35 s postinjection, the tracer marked ∼75% of the plasmalemmal vesicles on the blood front of the endothelium, 15% of those located inside and none of those on the tissue front. At 45 s, the labeling of vesicles in the inner group reached 60% but remained nil for those on the tissue front. Marked vesicles appeared on the latter past 45 s and their frequency increased to ∼80% by 60–75 s, concomitantly with the appearance of myoglobin in the pericapillary spaces. Significant regional heterogeneity in initial labeling was found in the different segments of the endothelium (i.e., perinuclear cytoplasm, organelle region, cell periphery, and parajunctional zone). Up to 60 s, the intercellular junctions and spaces of the endothelium were free of myoglobin reaction product; thereafter, the latter was detected in the distal part of the intercellular spaces in concentration generally equal to or lower than that prevailing in the adjacent pericapillary space. The findings indicate that myoglobin molecules cross the endothelium of muscle capillaries primarily via plasmalemmal vesicles. Since a molecule of this size is supposed to exit through both pore systems, our results confirm the earlier conclusion that the plasmalemmal vesicles represent the large pore system; in addition, they suggest that the same structures are, at least in part, the structural equivalent of the small pore system of this type of capillaries. The Rockefeller University Press 1973-05-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2108986/ /pubmed/4696549 Text en Copyright © 1973 by The Rockefeller University Press This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Simionescu, Nicolae
Simionescu, Maia
Palade, George E.
PERMEABILITY OF MUSCLE CAPILLARIES TO EXOGENOUS MYOGLOBIN
title PERMEABILITY OF MUSCLE CAPILLARIES TO EXOGENOUS MYOGLOBIN
title_full PERMEABILITY OF MUSCLE CAPILLARIES TO EXOGENOUS MYOGLOBIN
title_fullStr PERMEABILITY OF MUSCLE CAPILLARIES TO EXOGENOUS MYOGLOBIN
title_full_unstemmed PERMEABILITY OF MUSCLE CAPILLARIES TO EXOGENOUS MYOGLOBIN
title_short PERMEABILITY OF MUSCLE CAPILLARIES TO EXOGENOUS MYOGLOBIN
title_sort permeability of muscle capillaries to exogenous myoglobin
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2108986/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/4696549
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