Summary
A fibrillar elastic apparatus around the wall of human lymph capillaries is demonstrated by means of histochemical and ultrastructural techniques. This apparatus consists of three interlinked components listed here in order of increasing distance from the capillary wall: 1) oxytalan fibres connected to the abluminal surface of the endothelial cells, known also as “anchoring filaments” and consisting of bundles of microfibrils; 2) elaunin fibres consisting of microfibrils and a small amount of elastin; and 3) typical elastic fibres consisting of microfibrils and abundant elastin.
The microfibrillar constituent has similar ultrastructural features in the three components of the elastic apparatus. Microfibrils have a diameter of 12–14 nm, an electrontransparent core and a wall with 3–5 electron-dense subunits and oblique cross striations with a period of 15–17 nm. Microfibrils are the common element of the three components of the elastic apparatus and they link them to one another and to the elastic network of the perivascular connective tissue. An elastic apparatus was not found around blood capillaries and it can thus provide a histological marker to identify lymph capillaries. The possible role of the lymphatic elastic apparatus in the physiological activity of the lymphatic absorbing network is discussed and it is proposed that its disconnection from the elastic network of the tissue may promote pathological conditions such as lymphoedema or diseases related to impaired immune responses.
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Gerli, R., Ibba, L. & Fruschelli, C. A fibrillar elastic apparatus around human lymph capillaries. Anat Embryol 181, 281–286 (1990). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00174621
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00174621