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Biophys J, April 2001, p. 1670-1690, Vol. 80, No. 4
*Department of Physics, University of Western Australia, Perth,
Australia; and
Department of Mechanical and Industrial
Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana,
Illinois 61801 USA
An electrochemical theory of the glycocalyx surface layer
on capillary endothelial cells is developed as a model to study the
electrochemical dynamics of anionic molecular transport within capillaries. Combining a constitutive relationship for electrochemical transport, derived from Fick's and Ohm's laws, with the conservation of mass and Gauss's law from electrostatics, a system of three nonlinear, coupled, second-order, partial, integro-differential equations is obtained for the concentrations of the diffusing anionic
molecules and the cations and anions in the blood. With the exception
of small departures from electroneutrality that arise locally near the
apical region of the glycocalyx, the model assumes that cations in the
blood counterbalance the fixed negative charges bound to the
macromolecular matrix of the glycocalyx in equilibrium. In the presence
of anionic molecular tracers injected into the capillary lumen, the
model predicts the size- and charge-dependent electrophoretic mobility
of ions and tracers within the layer. In particular, the model predicts
that anionic molecules are excluded from the glycocalyx at equilibrium
and that the extent of this exclusion, which increases with increasing
tracer and/or glycocalyx electronegativity, is a fundamental
determinant of anionic molecular transport through the layer. The model
equations were integrated numerically using a Crank-Nicolson
finite-difference scheme and Newton-Raphson iteration. When the
concentration of the anionic molecular tracer is small compared with
the concentration of ions in the blood, a linearized version of the
model can be obtained and solved as an eigenvalue problem. The results
of the linear and nonlinear models were found to be in good agreement
for this physiologically important case. Furthermore, if the
fixed-charge density of the glycocalyx is of the order of the
concentration of ions in the blood, or larger, or if the magnitude of
the anionic molecular valence is large, a closed-form asymptotic
solution for the diffusion time can be obtained from the eigenvalue
problem that compares favorably with the numerical solution. In either case, if leakage of anionic molecules out of the capillary occurs, diffusion time is seen to vary exponentially with anionic valence and
in inverse proportion to the steady-state anionic tracer concentration in the layer relative to the lumen. These findings suggest several methods for obtaining an estimate of the glycocalyx fixed-charge density in vivo.
Biophys J, April 2001, p. 1670-1690, Vol. 80, No. 4
© 2001 by the Biophysical Society 0006-3495/01/04/1670/21 $2.00
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