Department of Physiology & Membrane Biology, School of Medicine, University of California, Davis, United States of America.
Department of Physiology & Membrane Biology, School of Medicine, University of California, Davis, United States of America.
Vascul Pharmacol. 2024 Sep;156:107393. doi: 10.1016/j.vph.2024.107393. Epub 2024 Jun 8.
Capillaries are the smallest blood vessels (<10 μm in diameter) in the body and their walls are lined by endothelial cells. These microvessels play a crucial role in nutrient and gas exchange between blood and tissues. Capillary endothelial cells also produce vasoactive molecules and initiate the electrical signals that underlie functional hyperemia and neurovascular coupling. Accordingly, capillary function and density are critical for all cell types to match blood flow to cellular activity. This begins with the process of angiogenesis, when new capillary blood vessels emerge from pre-existing vessels, and ends with rarefaction, the loss of these microvascular structures. This review explores the mechanisms behind these processes, emphasizing their roles in various microvascular diseases and their impact on surrounding cells in health and disease. We discuss recent work on the mechanisms controlling endothelial cell proliferation, migration, and tube formation that underlie angiogenesis under physiological and pathological conditions. The mechanisms underlying functional and anatomical rarefaction and the role of pericytes in this process are also discussed. Based on this work, a model is proposed in which the balance of angiogenic and rarefaction signaling pathways in a particular tissue match microvascular density to the metabolic demands of the surrounding cells. This negative feedback loop becomes disrupted during microvascular rarefaction: angiogenic mechanisms are blunted, reactive oxygen species accumulate, capillary function declines and eventually, capillaries disappear. This, we propose, forms the foundation of the reciprocal relationship between vascular density, blood flow, and metabolic needs and functionality of nearby cells.
毛细血管是体内最小的血管(直径<10μm),其壁由内皮细胞组成。这些微血管在血液和组织之间的营养物质和气体交换中起着至关重要的作用。毛细血管内皮细胞还产生血管活性分子,并引发电信号,从而实现功能性充血和神经血管耦联。因此,毛细血管的功能和密度对于所有细胞类型都至关重要,以使其血流与细胞活动相匹配。这从血管生成过程开始,即新的毛细血管从现有血管中出现,最后以稀疏为结束,即这些微血管结构的丧失。本综述探讨了这些过程背后的机制,强调了它们在各种微血管疾病中的作用及其对健康和疾病中周围细胞的影响。我们讨论了最近关于控制内皮细胞增殖、迁移和管状形成的机制的工作,这些机制是生理和病理条件下血管生成的基础。还讨论了功能性和解剖学稀疏的机制以及周细胞在此过程中的作用。基于这项工作,提出了一个模型,即特定组织中血管生成和稀疏信号通路的平衡与周围细胞的代谢需求相匹配,从而使微血管密度相匹配。在微血管稀疏过程中,这种负反馈循环被打破:血管生成机制减弱,活性氧积累,毛细血管功能下降,最终毛细血管消失。我们认为,这构成了血管密度、血流和附近细胞代谢需求和功能之间相互关系的基础。