AI Article Synopsis

  • Understanding the glomerular microcirculation as part of the overall microcirculation enhances our insight into both kidney and systemic vascular dysfunctions.
  • The endothelial glycocalyx, a protective layer on blood vessels, plays a crucial role in maintaining the permeability of both glomerular and systemic microvessels, impacting how substances move across the vessel walls.
  • Damage to the endothelial glycocalyx can lead to issues like albuminuria in the kidneys and overall increased permeability in other microvascular systems, which is linked to diseases such as diabetes and conditions like ischaemia-reperfusion injury.

Article Abstract

Appreciation of the glomerular microcirculation as a specialized microcirculatory bed, rather than as an entirely separate entity, affords important insights into both glomerular and systemic microvascular pathophysiology. In this review we compare regulation of permeability in systemic and glomerular microcirculations, focusing particularly on the role of the endothelial glycocalyx, and consider the implications for disease processes. The luminal surface of vascular endothelium throughout the body is covered with endothelial glycocalyx, comprising surface-anchored proteoglycans, supplemented with adsorbed soluble proteoglycans, glycosaminoglycans and plasma constituents. In both continuous and fenestrated microvessels, this endothelial glycocalyx provides resistance to the transcapillary escape of water and macromolecules, acting as an integral component of the multilayered barrier provided by the walls of these microvessels (ie acting in concert with clefts or fenestrae across endothelial cell layers, basement membranes and pericytes). Dysfunction of any of these capillary wall components, including the endothelial glycocalyx, can disrupt normal microvascular permeability. Because of its ubiquitous nature, damage to the endothelial glycocalyx alters the permeability of multiple capillary beds: in the glomerulus this is clinically apparent as albuminuria. Generalized damage to the endothelial glycocalyx can therefore manifest as both albuminuria and increased systemic microvascular permeability. This triad of altered endothelial glycocalyx, albuminuria and increased systemic microvascular permeability occurs in a number of important diseases, such as diabetes, with accumulating evidence for a similar phenomenon in ischaemia-reperfusion injury and infectious disease. The detection of albuminuria therefore has implications for the function of the microcirculation as a whole. The importance of the endothelial glycocalyx for other aspects of vascular function/dysfunction, such as mechanotransduction, leukocyte-endothelial interactions and the development of atherosclerosis, indicate that alterations in the endothelial glycocalyx may also be playing a role in the dysfunction of other organs observed in these disease states.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/path.3964DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

endothelial glycocalyx
40
microvascular permeability
16
albuminuria increased
12
systemic microvascular
12
endothelial
11
glycocalyx
9
damage endothelial
8
increased systemic
8
permeability
6
albuminuria
5

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!