Author:
Gil J.,Silage D. A.,McNiff J. M.
Abstract
Vesicular transport has been proposed as a pressure-independent shuttle mechanism for transport of macromolecules across thin cells. The vesicular populations of cells found in the gas-exchanging parenchyma were quantitated by morphometric means. We found that the numerical densities (number of vesicles/unit of volume) were comparable in endothelial (131/micrometer 3) and epithelial (145/microm3) type I cells but much smaller for interstitial cells. The vesicular loads or numbers of vesicles/unit of surface area were computed separately for each cell front (luminal and abluminal) and found to be similar for all surfaces, ranging from 150 to 196/micrometer 2 except for the interstitial front of epithelial cells where the load was higher (230/micrometer 2). Although this represents a very high transport potential, little can be said about vesicular effective performance because of insufficient knowledge of vesicular biology and biophysics. A frequent observation in the capillary network is attenuations of endothelial cells, which are thinner than the vesicular diameter and devoid of vesicles.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology
Cited by
29 articles.
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