Seeing eye to eye: Plasma‐protein binding is effective in improving the pharmacokinetic properties of otherwise short‐lived molecules. One compound in a class of small portable albumin binders can be used to improve the in vivo circulatory half‐life of two widely used contrast agents. It improves the imaging performance of fluorescein in angiographic analysis of the retina of mice (see picture).
T cells develop in the thymus in a highly specialized cellular and extracellular microenvironment. The basement membrane molecule, laminin-5 (LN-5), is predominantly found in the medulla of the human thymic lobules. Using high-resolution light microscopy, we show here that LN-5 is localized in a bi-membranous conduit-like structure, together with other typical basement membrane components including collagen type IV, nidogen and perlecan. Other interstitial matrix components, such as fibrillin-1 or -2, tenascin-C or fibrillar collagen types, were also associated with these structures. Three-dimensional (3D) confocal microscopy suggested a tubular structure, whereas immunoelectron and transmission electron microscopy showed that the core of these tubes contained fibrillar collagens enwrapped by the LN-5-containing membrane. These medullary conduits are surrounded by thymic epithelial cells, which in vitro were found to bind LN-5, but also fibrillin and tenascin-C. Dendritic cells were also detected in close vicinity to the conduits. Both of these stromal cell types express major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II molecules capable of antigen presentation. The conduits are connected to blood vessels but, with an average diameter of 2 μm, they are too small to transport cells. However, evidence is provided that smaller molecules such as a 10 kDa dextran, but not large molecules (>500 kDa), can be transported in the conduits. These results clearly demonstrate that a conduit system, which is also known from secondary lymphatic organs such as lymph nodes and spleen, is present in the medulla of the human thymus, and that it might serve to transport small blood-borne molecules or chemokines to defined locations within the medulla.
Die Bindung an Plasmaproteine verbessert die pharmakokinetischen Eigenschaften anderenfalls kurzlebiger Moleküle. Ein niedermolekularer Albuminbinder wurde genutzt, um die Halbwertszeiten zweier verbreiteter Kontrastmittel im Blutkreislauf zu erhöhen. Die Verbindung steigert die Leistungsfähigkeit von Fluorescein bei der angiographischen Analyse der Netzhaut im Mausmodell (siehe Bild).
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.