Lymphatic vessels are capable of sustaining lymph formation and propulsion via an intrinsic mechanism based on the spontaneous contraction of the lymphatic muscle in the wall of lymphatic collectors. Exposure to a hyper- or hypo-osmolar environment can deeply affect the intrinsic contraction rate and therefore alter lymph flow. In this work, we aimed at defining the putative receptors underlying such a response.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLymphatic vessels exploit the mechanical stresses of their surroundings together with intrinsic rhythmic contractions to drain lymph from interstitial spaces and serosal cavities to eventually empty into the blood venous stream. This task is more difficult when the liquid to be drained has a very subatmospheric pressure, as it occurs in the pleural cavity. This peculiar space must maintain a very low fluid volume at negative hydraulic pressure in order to guarantee a proper mechanical coupling between the chest wall and lungs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLymphatic vessels play a distinctive role in draining fluid, molecules and even cells from interstitial and serosal spaces back to the blood circulation. Lymph vessels of the gut, and especially those located in the villi (called lacteals), not only serve this primary function, but are also responsible for the transport of lipid moieties absorbed by the intestinal mucosa and serve as a second line of defence against possible bacterial infections. Here, we briefly review the current knowledge of the general mechanisms allowing lymph drainage and propulsion and will focus on the most recent findings on the mutual relationship between lacteals and intestinal microbiota.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLymphatic vessels drain and propel lymph by exploiting external forces that surrounding tissues exert upon vessel walls (extrinsic mechanism) and by using active, rhythmic contractions of lymphatic muscle cells embedded in the vessel wall of collecting lymphatics (intrinsic mechanism). The latter mechanism is the major source of the hydraulic pressure gradient where scant extrinsic forces are generated in the microenvironment surrounding lymphatic vessels. It is mainly involved in generating pressure gradients between the interstitial spaces and the vessel lumen and between adjacent lymphatic vessels segments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe proposal of this study was to evaluate, , the potential paracrine effect of human adipose-derived stem cells (hASCs) to promote lymphangiogenesis in lymphatic endothelial cells isolated from rat diaphragmatic lymphatic vessels. ELISA on VEGFA, VEGFC and IL6 in hASC-conditioned medium; LYVE1 immunostaining; and gene expression of , , and were the methods used. In 2D culture, hASC-conditioned medium was able to promote lymphatic endothelial cell survival, maintenance of endothelial cobblestone morphology and induction to form a vessel-like structure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe lymphatic system drains and propels lymph by extrinsic and intrinsic mechanisms. Intrinsic propulsion depends upon spontaneous rhythmic contractions of lymphatic muscles in the vessel walls and is critically affected by changes in the surrounding tissue like osmolarity and temperature. Lymphatics of the diaphragm display a steep change in contraction frequency in response to changes in temperature, and this, in turn, affects lymph flow.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLymphatic vessels drain fluids and solutes from interstitial spaces and serosal cavities. Among the solutes, low-density lipoproteins (LDL) are drained and can be detected in peripheral lymph, where they have been reported to exert a modulatory action on lymphatic vessels intrinsic contraction rate. In the present work, we investigated lymphatic vessel mechanical properties (contraction frequency and amplitude) that may be modulated by LDL application and the consequence on lymph flow.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe gene expression of the extracellular matrix macromolecules is critical in the analysis of various pathologies. The use of a RT-PCR directly on a fixed tissue enables the recognition of the real expressing cells for any ECM molecules together with the tissue localization. The method here described is easy to perform using the same material as for common immunostaining and the same primers used for quantitative RT-PCR.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLymph formation and propulsion rely on an extrinsic mechanism based on the forces that surrounding tissues exert upon the vessel wall and lumen and an intrinsic mechanism based on spontaneous, rhythmic contractions of the lymphatic muscle layer of collecting vessels. The two spontaneous pacemakers described in literature involve chloride-dependent depolarizations (STDs) and I-like currents, both giving rise to a variable contraction frequency (f) of lymphatic vessels functional units (lymphangions). Several stimuli have been shown to modulate f, such as temperature, shear stress, and several tissue chemical modulators (prostaglandins, norepinephrine, acetylcholine, substance P, and others).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol
November 2017
Lymph drainage and propulsion are sustained by an extrinsic mechanism, based on mechanical forces acting from the surrounding tissues against the wall of lymphatic vessels, and by an intrinsic mechanism attributable to active spontaneous contractions of the lymphatic vessel muscle. Despite being heterogeneous, the mechanisms underlying the generation of spontaneous contractions share a common biochemical nature and are thus modulated by temperature. In this study, we challenged excised tissues from rat diaphragm and hindpaw, endowed with spontaneously contracting lymphatic vessels, to temperatures from 24°C (hindpaw) or 33°C (diaphragmatic vessels) to 40°C while measuring lymphatic contraction frequency () and amplitude.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol
October 2016
Diaphragmatic lymphatic function is mainly sustained by pressure changes in the tissue and serosal cavities during cardiorespiratory cycles. The most peripheral diaphragmatic lymphatics are equipped with muscle cells (LMCs), which exhibit spontaneous contraction, whose molecular machinery is still undetermined. Hypothesizing that spontaneous contraction might involve hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotide-gated (HCN) channels in lymphatic LMCs, diaphragmatic specimens, including spontaneously contracting lymphatics, were excised from 33 anesthetized rats, moved to a perfusion chamber containing HEPES-Tyrode's solution, and treated with HCN channels inhibitors cesium chloride (CsCl), ivabradine, and ZD-7288.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol
January 2016
Peripheral rat diaphragmatic lymphatic vessels, endowed with intrinsic spontaneous contractility, were in vivo filled with fluorescent dextrans and microspheres and subsequently studied ex vivo in excised diaphragmatic samples. Changes in diameter and lymph velocity were detected, in a vessel segment, during spontaneous lymphatic smooth muscle contraction and upon activation, through electrical whole-field stimulation, of diaphragmatic skeletal muscle fibers. During intrinsic contraction lymph flowed both forward and backward, with a net forward propulsion of 14.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: To investigate the regional gravity-dependent impact of mechanical ventilation and fluid overload on lung extracellular matrix (ECM) in healthy lungs.
Materials And Methods: The glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) composition of the ventral and dorsal lung parenchyma was determined in anesthetized supine healthy rats mechanically ventilated for 4 hours in air: (a) at low (∼7.5 mL/kg) or high (∼ 23 mL /kg) tidal volume (V(T)) and 0 cmH2O positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP); (b) at low or high V(T) at 5 cmH2O PEEP and (c) with or without 7 mL /(kg·h) intravenous saline infusion.
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol
February 2015
The mechanism through which the stresses developed in the diaphragmatic tissue during skeletal muscle contraction sustain local lymphatic function was studied in 10 deeply anesthetized, tracheotomized adult Wistar rats whose diaphragm was exposed after thoracotomy. To evaluate the direct effect of skeletal muscle contraction on the hydraulic intraluminal lymphatic pressures (Plymph) and lymphatic vessel geometry, the maximal contraction of diaphragmatic fibers adjacent to a lymphatic vessel was elicited by injection of 9.2 nl of 1 M KCl solution among diaphragmatic fibers while Plymph was recorded through micropuncture and vessel geometry via stereomicroscopy video recording.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol
October 2013
The spontaneous contractility of FITC-dextran-filled lymphatics at the periphery of the pleural diaphragm was documented for the first time "in vivo" in anesthetized Wistar rats. We found that lymphatic segments could be divided into four phenotypes: 1) active, displaying rhythmic spontaneous contractions (51.8% of 197 analyzed sites); 2) stretch-activated, whose contraction was triggered by passive distension of the vessel lumen (4.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe combined effect of mechanical ventilation and fluid load on pulmonary glycasaminoglycans (GAGs) was studied in anaesthetized rats ((BW 290±21.8 (SE)g) mechanically ventilated for 4h: (a) at low (∼7.5mlkg(-1)) or high (∼23mlkg(-1)) tidal volume (V(T)) and zero alveolar pressure; (b) at low or high V(T) at 5cmH(2)O positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP); (c) with or without 7mlkg(-1)h(-1) intravenous infusion of Phosphate Buffer Solution (PBS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe role of the mechanical properties of the initial lymphatic wall and of the surrounding tissue in supporting lymph formation and/or progression was studied in six anaesthetized, neuromuscularly blocked and mechanically ventilated rats. After mid-sternal thoracotomy, submesothelial initial lymphatics were identified on the pleural diaphragmatic surface through stereomicroscopy. An 'in vivo' lymphatic segment was prepared by securing two surgical threads around the vessel at a distance of ∼2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol
September 2008
The specific role of loops and/or linear segments in pleural diaphragmatic submesothelial lymphatics was investigated in seven anesthetized, paralyzed, and mechanically ventilated rats. Lymphatic loops lay peripherally above the diaphragmatic muscular plane, whereas linear vessels run over both the muscular and central tendineous regions. Lymph vessel diameter, measured by automatic software analysis, was significantly greater (P < 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Appl Physiol (1985)
September 2007
This research investigated whether stretching of lung tissue due to increased positive alveolar pressure swings during mechanical ventilation (MV) at various tidal volumes (V(T)) might affect the composition and/or structure of the glycosaminoglycan (GAG) components of pulmonary extracellular proteoglycans. Experiments were performed in 30 healthy rats: 1) anesthetized and immediately killed (controls, C-0); 2) anesthetized and spontaneously breathing for 4 h (C-4h); and 3) anesthetized, paralyzed, and mechanically ventilated for 4 h with air at 0-cmH(2)O end-expiratory pressure and V(T) of 8 ml/kg (MV-1), 16 ml/kg (MV-2), 24 ml/kg (MV-3), or 32 ml/kg (MV-4), adjusting respiratory rates at a minute ventilation of 270 ml/min. Compared with C-0 and C-4h, a significant reduction of dynamic and static compliance of the respiratory system and of the lung was observed only in MV-4, while extravascular lung water significantly increased in MV-3 and MV-4, but not in MV-1 and MV-2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe specific role of the diaphragmatic tendinous and muscular tissues in sustaining lymph formation and propulsion in the diaphragm was studied in 24 anaesthetized spontaneously breathing supine rats. Three experimental protocols were used: (a) control; (b) peritoneal ascitis, induced through an intraperitoneal injection of 100 ml kg(-1) of iso-oncotic saline; and (c) pleural effusion, induced through an intrapleural injection of 6.6 ml kg(-1) saline solution.
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