The relationship between the secondary vascular system and the lymphatic vascular system in fish

Author:

Panara Virginia123,Varaliová Zuzana14,Wilting Jörg5,Koltowska Katarzyna12,Jeltsch Michael46789ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Rudbeck Laboratory, Department of Immunology, Genetics and Pathology Uppsala University Dag Hammarskjölds väg 20 Uppsala 751 85 Sweden

2. Beijer Laboratory, Department of Immunology, Genetics and Pathology Uppsala University Dag Hammarskjölds väg 20 Uppsala 751 85 Sweden

3. Department of Organismal Biology, Evolutionary Biology Centre Uppsala University Norbyvägen 18 A Uppsala 752 36 Sweden

4. Drug Research Program University of Helsinki Viikinkaari 5E Helsinki 00790 Finland

5. Institute of Anatomy and Embryology, University Medical School Göttingen Kreuzbergring 36 Göttingen 37075 Germany

6. Individualized Drug Therapy Research Program, University of Helsinki Haartmaninkatu 8 Helsinki 00290 Finland

7. Wihuri Research Institute Haartmaninkatu 8 Helsinki 00290 Finland

8. Helsinki One Health, University of Helsinki P.O. Box 4 Helsinki 00014 Finland

9. Helsinki Institute of Sustainability Science Yliopistonkatu 3 Helsinki 00100 Finland

Abstract

ABSTRACTNew technologies have resulted in a better understanding of blood and lymphatic vascular heterogeneity at the cellular and molecular levels. However, we still need to learn more about the heterogeneity of the cardiovascular and lymphatic systems among different species at the anatomical and functional levels. Even the deceptively simple question of the functions of fish lymphatic vessels has yet to be conclusively answered. The most common interpretation assumes a similar dual setup of the vasculature in zebrafish and mammals: a cardiovascular circulatory system, and a lymphatic vascular system (LVS), in which the unidirectional flow is derived from surplus interstitial fluid and returned into the cardiovascular system. A competing interpretation questions the identity of the lymphatic vessels in fish as at least some of them receive their flow from arteries via specialised anastomoses, neither requiring an interstitial source for the lymphatic flow nor stipulating unidirectionality. In this alternative view, the ‘fish lymphatics’ are a specialised subcompartment of the cardiovascular system, called the secondary vascular system (SVS). Many of the contradictions found in the literature appear to stem from the fact that the SVS develops in part or completely from an embryonic LVS by transdifferentiation. Future research needs to establish the extent of embryonic transdifferentiation of lymphatics into SVS blood vessels. Similarly, more insight is needed into the molecular regulation of vascular development in fish. Most fish possess more than the five vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) genes and three VEGF receptor genes that we know from mice or humans, and the relative tolerance of fish to whole‐genome and gene duplications could underlie the evolutionary diversification of the vasculature. This review discusses the key elements of the fish lymphatics versus the SVS and attempts to draw a picture coherent with the existing data, including phylogenetic knowledge.

Funder

Research Council of Finland

Knut och Alice Wallenbergs Stiftelse

Vetenskapsrådet

Kjell och Märta Beijers Stiftelse

Publisher

Wiley

Reference263 articles.

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