Meningeal lymphatic endothelial cells fulfill scavenger endothelial cell function and employ Mrc1a for cargo uptake
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Abstract
Brain lymphatic endothelial cells (BLECs) constitute a group of loosely connected endothelial cells within the meningeal layer of the zebrafish brain. We previously reported that BLECs efficiently endocytose extracellular cargo molecules (van Lessen et al., 2017), but how this is accomplished and controlled on the molecular level remains unclear. We here compare BLECs to scavenging endothelial cells (SECs) in the embryonic cardinal vein and find them to accept an identical set of substrate molecules. While there is redundancy in the type of scavenger receptors being used, the two cell populations rely for specific substrate molecules on different cell surface receptors to mediate their physiological role: Stab2 appears more critical within SECs in the cardinal vein, while BLECs depend more on the Mrc1a receptor for internalization of cargo. Given the striking similarities to the substrate specificity of cardinal vein SECs, we postulate that BLECs qualify functionally as SECs of the brain.
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- europepmc
- last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00