Functionally specialized junctions between endothelial cells of lymphatic vessels

Peter Bałuk(University of California, San Francisco), Jonas Fuxe(University of California, San Francisco), Hiroya Hashizume(University of California, San Francisco), Talia Romano(University of California, San Francisco), Erin Lashnits(University of California, San Francisco), Stefan Butz(University of Münster), Dietmar Vestweber(University of Münster), Monica Corada(IFOM), Cinzia Molendini(IFOM), Elisabetta Dejana(University of Milan), Donald M. McDonald(University of California, San Francisco)
The Journal of Experimental Medicine
September 10, 2007
Cited by 984Open Access
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Abstract

Recirculation of fluid and cells through lymphatic vessels plays a key role in normal tissue homeostasis, inflammatory diseases, and cancer. Despite recent advances in understanding lymphatic function (Alitalo, K., T. Tammela, and T.V. Petrova. 2005. Nature. 438:946-953), the cellular features responsible for entry of fluid and cells into lymphatics are incompletely understood. We report the presence of novel junctions between endothelial cells of initial lymphatics at likely sites of fluid entry. Overlapping flaps at borders of oak leaf-shaped endothelial cells of initial lymphatics lacked junctions at the tip but were anchored on the sides by discontinuous button-like junctions (buttons) that differed from conventional, continuous, zipper-like junctions (zippers) in collecting lymphatics and blood vessels. However, both buttons and zippers were composed of vascular endothelial cadherin (VE-cadherin) and tight junction-associated proteins, including occludin, claudin-5, zonula occludens-1, junctional adhesion molecule-A, and endothelial cell-selective adhesion molecule. In C57BL/6 mice, VE-cadherin was required for maintenance of junctional integrity, but platelet/endothelial cell adhesion molecule-1 was not. Growing tips of lymphatic sprouts had zippers, not buttons, suggesting that buttons are specialized junctions rather than immature ones. Our findings suggest that fluid enters throughout initial lymphatics via openings between buttons, which open and close without disrupting junctional integrity, but most leukocytes enter the proximal half of initial lymphatics.


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