Cultured human umbilical vein endothelial cells superfused with Krebs' solution were used to investigate release of ATP, substance P and acetycholine with shear stress. ATP was consistently released when the cells were exposed to increased flow rate; release was rapid, had declined by 1 min and occurred upon a second exposure. Release of substance P and acetylcholine was more varied; increased shear stress led to release of substance P from 4 out of 16 endothelial-cell columns, whereas acetylcholine was released in 4 out of 12 columns. This is the first time that unequivocal evidence has been presented for release of these neurotransmitter substances from vascular endothelial cells. These findings have important implications about the mechanisms of local regulation of vascular tone.
SUMMARY1. Nutrient transport in cultured human umbilical vein endothelial cells was characterized using a rapid dual-isotope dilution technique. Microcarrier beads with confluent endothelial cells were perfused in small columns, and uptake and efflux were assessed relative to D-mannitol (extracellular tracer) during a single transit through the column.2. At tracer concentrations significant unidirectional uptakes were measured for L-leucine (53 + 2 %), L-phenylalanine (73 + 2 %), L-serine (40 +4%), L-arginine (42 + 3 %) and L-ornithine (26 + 3 %). Uptake for L-proline, D-glucose, dopamine and serotonin was lower (6-10 %), whereas uptake for the system A analogue 2-methylaminoisobutyric acid (2-MeAIB) was negligible. Uptakes rapidly decreased with time due to tracer efflux. 6. Our results provide the first evidence that cultured human endothelial cells of venous origin express a saturable transport system for large neutral amino acids resembling system L described in brain microvascular endothelium. Detection of Na+-dependent and Na+-independent L-arginine uptake is of interest in view of recent reports that this cationic amino acid may be the physiological precursor for nitric oxide released by endothelium.
We have applied a multiple isotope dilution technique to examine junctional permeability of human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) in vitro. Primary cultures were grown to confluence on porous Cytodex-3 microcarrier beads, packed into 0.3 ml columns (3 x 10(6) cells) and perfused at varying flow rates (0.3-1.2 ml/min) with HEPES-buffered Tyrodes solution containing unlabeled cyanocobalamin, insulin, and albumin. Columns were challenged periodically with mixtures of radioactive tracers of different molecular size. Permeability to 22Na+, [57Co]cyanocobalamin (1.3 kD), [125I]insulin (6 kD) or [125I]albumin (66 kD) was assessed relative to [131I]IgG (160 kD, impermeant reference tracer) by comparing column elution profiles. Although the single passage extraction of [125I]albumin by beads alone approximated 40%, the presence of confluent HUVEC rendered these beads effectively impermeable to albumin. High junctional extractions were measured for cyanocobalamin (0.79 +/- 0.02, n = 28) and insulin (0.51 +/- 0.05, n = 14) in cultures perfused at 0.3-0.4 ml/min, and tracer extraction decreased as perfusion rates increased. Permeability coefficients for cyanocobalamin (9.66 x 10(-5) cm/s) and insulin (4.18 x 10(-5) cm/s) increased significantly during perfusion with thrombin (10 U/ml) or cytochalasin D (1 microgram/ml), whereas permeability to albumin (0.39 x 10(-5) cm/s) remained unchanged. Morphological studies, using the glycocalyx stain ruthenium red, revealed that thrombin or cytochalasin D increased the penetration of the stain into junctions between endothelial cells.
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