The transendothelial passage of horseradish peroxidase, injected intravenously into mice, was studied at the ultrastructural level in capillaries of cardiac and skeletal muscle. Peroxidase appeared to permeate endothelial intercellular clefts and cell junctions. Abnormal peroxidase-induced vascular leakage was excluded. Neutral lanthanum tracer gave similar results. The endothelial cell junctions were considered to be maculae occludentes, with gaps of about 40 A in width between the maculae, rather than zonulae occludentes. Some observations in favor of concurrent vesicular transport of peroxidase were also made. It is concluded that the endothelial cell junctions are most likely to be the morphological equivalent of the small pore system proposed by physiologists for the passage of small, lipid-insoluble molecules across the endothelium.
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1 October 1967
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October 01 1967
THE ULTRASTRUCTURAL BASIS OF CAPILLARY PERMEABILITY STUDIED WITH PEROXIDASE AS A TRACER
Morris J. Karnovsky
Morris J. Karnovsky
From the Department of Pathology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115
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Morris J. Karnovsky
From the Department of Pathology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115
Received:
April 20 1967
Revision Received:
June 09 1967
Accepted:
June 09 1967
Online ISSN: 1540-8140
Print ISSN: 0021-9525
Copyright © 1967 by The Rockefeller University Press
1967
J Cell Biol (1967) 35 (1): 213–236.
Article history
Received:
April 20 1967
Revision Received:
June 09 1967
Accepted:
June 09 1967
Citation
Morris J. Karnovsky; THE ULTRASTRUCTURAL BASIS OF CAPILLARY PERMEABILITY STUDIED WITH PEROXIDASE AS A TRACER . J Cell Biol 1 October 1967; 35 (1): 213–236. doi: https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.35.1.213
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