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Resolution: standard / high Figure 1.
Schematic depictions of the capillary wall ultrastructure in different blood capillary
microvasculatures. Shown in red are the anatomic sites in the capillary walls of the respective blood
capillary types that are the primary pathways for transvascular flow and transport
across the capillary wall, and as such, constitute the ultrastructural determinants
of the physiologic upper limit of pore size to transvascular flow. The green pillars
that emanate from the luminal surface of the endothelial lining represent the individual
mucopolysaccharide fibers of the endothelial glycocalyx layer (EGL), and the orange
hatched region that encircles the abluminal surface of the endothelial cell lining
represents the collagenous basement layer (interna and externa). As depicted in the
schematics, the capillary walls of the different types of non-sinusoidal blood capillaries
are proficient in all three layers (panels A, B and C), which is not the case for
the capillary walls of the sinusoidal blood capillaries of myeloid (red) bone marrow
and the liver (panels D and E). Also depicted in panels D and E are the 'bristle-coated
pits' of myeloid bone marrow and hepatic sinusoidal blood capillary the reticuloendothelial
cells, which constitute the anatomic sites at which the phago-endocytosis of non-endogenous
macromolecules occurs.
A. Non-sinusoidal non-fenestrated blood capillaries B. Non-sinusoidal fenestrated blood capillaries with diaphragmed fenestrae C. Non-sinusoidal fenestrated blood capillaries with open 'non-diaphragmed' fenestrae D. Sinusoidal reticuloendothelial non-fenestrated blood capillaries of myeloid (red)
bone marrow
E. Sinusoidal reticuloendothelial fenestrated blood capillaries of the liver (Please view Additional files 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 for individual Figure 1 panels A, B, C, D and E with detailed panel descriptions)
Sarin Journal of Angiogenesis Research 2010 2:14 doi:10.1186/2040-2384-2-14 |