Bj. Barber et al., AGE-RELATED-CHANGES IN PERIMICROVASCULAR PROTEIN DISTRIBUTION, American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology, 38(4), 1995, pp. 1213-1220
The diffusion hypothesis for physiological aging proposes that an incr
ease in interstitial matrix fiber-to-gel ratio causes a decrease in nu
trient diffusion to the cells. This hypothesis predicts a decrease in
interstitial matrix protein with age. The objective was to test this h
ypothesis by determining age-related changes in plasma protein distrib
ution in perimicrovascular and distal regions of rat mesentery interst
itial matrix. Rats that were 77, 140, 210, 315, 455, and 630 days old
were anesthetized with pentobarbital sodium, and a mesenteric loop was
exteriorized. Intravital video microspectrophotometry was performed u
sing wavelengths of 280, 320, and 700 nm. Perimicrovascular protein co
ncentrations from the protein absorbance images were used to obtain th
e histogram, mean, and skewness of the proximal and distal protein con
centration distributions. An exponential gradient model was also used
to obtain the proximal and distal protein concentrations and gradient
decay constants. Proximal protein concentration increased from 77- to
140-day-old rat and then decreased gradually through 210-, 315-, 455-,
and 630-day old rats. Distal concentration decreased gradually from 1
40- to 630-day-old rats. There was an increase in positive skewness of
the proximal protein distributions from 140- through 630-day-old rats
. We found an age-related decrease in perimicrovascular protein and pr
opose that this is due to a decrease in protein permeability with age.
The results support the diffusion theory of aging.