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Quantification of adherens junction disruption and contiguous paracellular protein leak in human lung endothelial cells under septic conditions.

OBJECTIVE: Sepsis is associated with dysfunction of microvascular endothelial cells (MVEC) resulting in organ edema and inflammation. Vascular endothelial (VE)-cadherin, a component of MVEC adherens junctions, may be disrupted in sepsis. However, the direct connection between individual MVEC VE-cadherin disruption and increased paracellular permeability is uncertain.

METHODS: Human pulmonary MVEC were cultured on a biotin matrix and treated with cytomix, as a model of sepsis, vs PBS. MVEC permeability was assessed by trans-MVEC monolayer leak of Oregon green 488-conjugated avidin, which bound subcellular biotin to localize sites of paracellular leak. Leak was correlated with individual cell-specific MVEC surface VE-cadherin continuity by fluorescence microscopy.

RESULTS: Cytomix treatment reduced total MVEC VE-cadherin density, disrupted surface VE-cadherin continuity, was associated with intercellular gap formation, and enhanced paracellular avidin leak. Cytomix-induced MVEC paracellular avidin leak was strongly correlated temporally and was highly contiguous with focal MVEC surface VE-cadherin disruption. Total cellular VE-cadherin density was less strongly correlated with MVEC paracellular avidin leak and individual-cell specific focal surface VE-cadherin discontinuity.

CONCLUSIONS: These data support a mechanistic link between septic human lung MVEC VE-cadherin disruption and contiguous paracellular protein leak, and will permit more detailed assessment of individual cell-specific mechanisms of septic MVEC barrier dysfunction. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

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