A junctional protein (red) clumps (arrows) at lymph vessel entryways but is continuous (arrowheads) in the lower collecting ducts.
Lymph flows through a network that starts out as tiny vessels and then widens into collecting ducts. But how lymph gets from the blood into lymph vessels through the endothelial barrier is unclear. One model suggests that endothelial cells lack junctions and thus glide apart under mechanical stress. Another proposes that junctions break down to permit fluid entry and then reseal.
Baluk et al. did not favor either idea, as junctions are required to maintain vessel structure, and their breakdown and reconstruction spell excessive wear and tear on the vessel. The team traced...
The Rockefeller University Press
2007
The Rockefeller University Press
2007
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