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The Journal of Cell Biology, Vol 60, 128-152, Copyright © 1974 by Rockefeller University Press

ARTICLE

MORPHOMETRIC DATA ON THE ENDOTHELIUM OF BLOOD CAPILLARIES



Maia Simionescu 1, Nicolae Simionescu 1, and George E. Palade 1

1 From The Rockefeller University, New York 10021.

Doctors M. and N. Simionescu's permanent address is The Institute of Endocrinology, Bucharest, Romania.

Local differentiations within the endothelium of both muscular (diaphragm, myocardium) and visceral (pancreas, jejunal villi) capillaries have been studied in rats on sectioned and freeze-cleaved preparations. Four distinct parts have been recognized in the endothelial cells of all these vessels on the basis of subcellular components present in each part and on the basis of variations in the local frequency of plasmalemmal vesicles: (a) the parajunctional zone, (b) the peripheral zone, (c) the organelle region, and (d) the nuclear region. Our data indicate that sim16, sim7.0, and 8.5% of the endothelial cytoplasmic volume (in the peripheral zone) is accounted for by vesicles, their content, and their membranes, respectively. The average density of vesicular openings per µm2 is 78 in diaphragm, 89 in myocardium, 25 in pancreas, and 10 in jejunal mucosa capillaries. The frequency of fenestrae is 1.7 times as high in jejunal (26/µm2) as in pancreatic capillaries (15/µm2), the corresponding fractional areas being sim9.5 and sim6%, respectively, of the endothelial surface. Intercellular spaces occupy a relatively small area (sim0.08 to 0.2%) of the inner endothelial surface.

Submitted on June 19, 1973
Revised on August 10, 1973


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