vascular endothelium Flashcards

1
Q

Where are most of endothelial cells?

A

Within the vasculature

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2
Q

What are the 3 layers of the endothelium and what do they contain? Which blood vessels don’t have these 3 layers

A

(from inside to outside)

  • Tunica intima (endothelial cells), tunica media (smooth muscle cells) & tunica adventitia (vasa vasorum, nerves).
  • Capillaries & venules do not have these layers
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3
Q

What is the structure of capillaries and venules?

A

Endothelium, supported by mural cells (pericytes) & a basement membrane

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4
Q

What is the microvascular endothelium a source of ?

A

Angiocrine factors required for maintenance of tissue homeostasis & organ regeneration

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5
Q

What does dysfunction of the endothelium lead to?

A

Contributes to disease more than any other organ (ischaemia, chronic inflammatory diseases, cancer, diabetes)

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6
Q

Why are not all blood vessels the same? What is an example of this?

A

Tissue-specific vasculature: function in different systems is different.

  • liver & kidney have very permeable vasculature because of filtration functions so look different.
  • Organotypic (tissue-specific) properties & expression profiles
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7
Q

What is the structure of endothelial cells?

A
  • Very extensive so large surface area.
  • Very flat - 1-2μm thick & 10-20μm in diameter.
  • Formed by monolayer of endothelial cells (1 cell deep)
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8
Q

What is contact inhibition?

A

When endothelial cell-cell junctions are established resulting in cells telling each other to stop growing

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9
Q

How long do endothelial cells usually survive?

A

Long life and have low proliferation rate (unless new vessel needed - angiogenesis)

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10
Q

How are endothelial cells heterogenous?

A

Functions and phenotype depend on location

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11
Q

What are key functions controlled by the endothelium?

A
  • Provide angiocrine signals for tissue homeostasis.

- Functions controlled by endothelium include inflammation, permeability, vascular tone, thrombosis, angiogenesis.

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12
Q

What are the molecules that endothelial cells can produce and for what functions?

A
  • For vascular tone permeability can produce vasoconstrictive & vasodilative factors.
  • For thrombosis - anti-thrombotic and pro-thrombotic factors.
  • For inflammation - anti-inflammatory & pro-inflammatory factors.
  • Angiogenesis: anti-proliferative and pro-angiogenic factors
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13
Q

What happens in the resting endothelium and when endothelium is activated? What happens during chronic activation of the endothelium (and by what)?

A
  • In resting endothelium anti pathways switched on (anti-inflammaotry, anti-thrombotic etc).
  • In activated endothelium pro-factors switched on to respond to event and these usually revert back to balance.
  • Chronic activation of endothelium (eg. Atherosclerosis, smoking, viruses, inflammation) promotes thrombosis, increased permeability, leukocyte recruitment etc
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14
Q

What is the pathogenesis of atheroscerlosis?

A
  • initial injury due to factors activating endothelium.
  • Increase in leukocyte recruitment and accumulation of leukocytes in sub-endothelial space.
  • Increased permeability of lipoproteins in sub-endothelial space and subsequent phagocytosis of these form foam cells leading to advanced complicated lesion of atherosclerosis, causing more macrophages to accumulate forming necrotic core & stimulating angiogenesis from vasa vasorum in tissue
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15
Q

What are stimuli for endothelial cell dysfunction in atherogenesis?

A

Hypertension (ANGII & ROS), hypercholesterolinaemia (oxidatively modified lipoprotein), diabetes, sex hormone imbalance (oestrogen deficiency, menopause), ageing, oxidative stress, pro-inflammatory cytokines IL-1 & TNF, infectious agents, environmental toxins, turbulent blood flow

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16
Q

How does leukocyte recruitment happen into tissues during inflammation/infection?

A

During inflammation usually leukocytes adhere to endothelium of post-capillary venules to transmigrate into tissues

17
Q

How does leukocyte recruitment happen in atherosclerosis? where does this happen?

A
  • Leukocytes roll along endothelium, spread, find junctions to get through (inflammation activates endothelium to express molecules promoting this).
  • In atherosclerosis this happens in large arteries.
  • Leukocytes go through endothelium but find many walls they cant pass through and get stuck in subendothelial cells.
  • Monocytes migrate there, become macrophages and then foam cells
18
Q

how does vascular permeability happen in atherosclerosis and what does this lead to?

A
  • Endothelium regulates fluid & molecules going in/out blood and tissues.
  • Increased permeability results in leakage of plasma proteins through junctions into subendothelial cells.
  • Lipoproteins find leaky junctions, get oxidised in subendothelium and macrophages engulf lipoproteins to make foam cells
19
Q

What is the shear stress principle in atheroclerosis?

A
  • Atherosclerosis preferentially at bifurcations & curvatures of vascular tree because of non-uniform flow and haemodynamic forces.
  • Laminar flow in straight arteries so wall shear stress high and directional.
  • In curves, turbulent flow causes non-uniform and irregular distribution of wall shear stress.
20
Q

What does laminar blood flow promote? What does turbulent blood flow promote?

A
  • Laminar flow promotes anti-thrombotic & anti-inflammatory factors (thrombomodulin), endothelial survival, inhibits SMC proliferation, promotes nitric oxide production.
  • Turbulent flow promotes thrombosis, inflammation, endothelial apoptosis, SMC proliferation, loss of nitric oxide production
21
Q

What is nitric acid and its roles?

A

Regulator of vascular function - dilation of blood vessels, reduces platelet adhesion, inhibits monocyte adhesion, reduces SMC proliferation, reduces release of superoxide radicals, reduces oxidation of LDL cholesterol

22
Q

What is angiogenesis and how does it happen?

A
  • Formation of new blood vessels sprouting from existing vessels.
  • Endothelial cells hit by signalling of multiple hypoxia so endothelial cell activation, proliferation, migration and formation of new sprout
23
Q

What is angiogenesis necessary for?

A

Embryonic development, menstrual cycle, wound healing

24
Q

How can angiogenesis be bad and good in CV disease?

A
  • Bad: promotes plaque growth. In advanced plaques in atherosclerosis angiogenesis stimulated in vasa vasorum because lesion is chronic inflammatory disease.
  • Good: in MI occlusion of coronary artery we can induce angiogenesis downstream of blockage to re-vascularise ischaemic area and prevent loss of tissue
25
Q

What are circulating endothelial cells a sign of? What can it be corrected with?

A

-Sign of endothelial damage (shed because of damage). Corrected with anti-coagulation

26
Q

What is thrombo-inflammation and what can it cause? When does it occur?

A

Loss of normal anti-thrombotic and anti-inflammatory action of endothelial cells.
-Can cause thrombosis. Occurs in many disorders (sepsis, ischaemia-perfusion injury)

27
Q

what are the possible ways that infection of covid can cause thrombosis?

A
  1. cytokine storm activates endothelium and causes endothelial damage (pro-coagulant switch)
  2. sars-cov2 enters endothelial cells causing direct damage
28
Q

Does covid replicate in endothelial cells?

A

ACE2 expressed on epithelial, not endothelial cells. So no.