Belloni P N, Carney D H, Nicolson G L
Department of Tumor Biology, University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston 77030.
Microvasc Res. 1992 Jan;43(1):20-45. doi: 10.1016/0026-2862(92)90004-9.
To investigate the relationship between endothelial cells and organ-associated vascular physiology, microvascular endothelial cells were isolated from murine brain, lung, and liver tissues. During culture, these endothelial cells maintained certain differentiated characteristics common to all endothelial cells, but also showed organ-specific characteristics, with distinct patterns of responsiveness to various growth factors. Microvascular endothelial cells from all organs responded to endothelial cell growth factor (ECGF), but lung (LE-1) and brain (MBE-12) endothelial cells showed different responsiveness to thrombin (10-60 nM), combinations of thrombin and ECGF, or thrombin and extracellular matrix. Liver sinusoidal endothelial cells (HSE) were relatively unresponsive to thrombin, but were the most responsive of the endothelial cells to EGF. Endothelial cells isolated from lung and brain, where fluxes in vascular permeability are observed following injury, showed dramatic morphological alterations in response to nanomolar concentrations of thrombin. These cells also exhibited the highest amount of 125I-thrombin binding at these concentrations. Scatchard analysis of 125I-thrombin binding indicated that LE cells have the highest affinity for thrombin, followed by MBE, with HSE exhibiting significantly lower affinity. The binding of 125I-thrombin to these cells was inhibited by the TR-9 monoclonal antibody directed against fibroblast high-affinity thrombin receptors involved in thrombin-stimulated mitogenesis. The results suggest that the differences in growth stimulation observed between organ-derived endothelial cells in response to thrombin, ECGF, and EGF may relate to differential expression of receptors for these factors. These observations demonstrate yet another aspect of the functional heterogeneity of the microvascular endothelium.
为了研究内皮细胞与器官相关血管生理学之间的关系,从小鼠脑、肺和肝组织中分离出微血管内皮细胞。在培养过程中,这些内皮细胞保持了所有内皮细胞共有的某些分化特征,但也表现出器官特异性特征,对各种生长因子具有不同的反应模式。所有器官的微血管内皮细胞都对内皮细胞生长因子(ECGF)有反应,但肺(LE-1)和脑(MBE-12)内皮细胞对凝血酶(10 - 60 nM)、凝血酶与ECGF的组合或凝血酶与细胞外基质的反应不同。肝窦内皮细胞(HSE)对凝血酶相对不敏感,但在内皮细胞中对表皮生长因子(EGF)反应最为敏感。从肺和脑中分离出的内皮细胞,在损伤后会观察到血管通透性的变化,它们在纳摩尔浓度的凝血酶作用下会出现显著的形态改变。在这些浓度下,这些细胞还表现出最高量的¹²⁵I - 凝血酶结合。对¹²⁵I - 凝血酶结合的Scatchard分析表明,LE细胞对凝血酶的亲和力最高,其次是MBE,而HSE的亲和力则显著较低。针对参与凝血酶刺激的有丝分裂的成纤维细胞高亲和力凝血酶受体的TR - 9单克隆抗体可抑制¹²⁵I - 凝血酶与这些细胞的结合。结果表明,器官来源的内皮细胞在对凝血酶、ECGF和EGF的生长刺激反应上的差异可能与这些因子受体的差异表达有关。这些观察结果证明了微血管内皮功能异质性的另一个方面。