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  • Title: Incorporation of circulating fibronectin into various tissues during sepsis: colocalization with endogenous tissue fibronectin.
    Author: Jin HM, Vincent PA, Charash WE, Saba TM, McKeown-Longo P, Blumenstock FA, Lewis E.
    Journal: Exp Mol Pathol; 1991 Dec; 55(3):203-16. PubMed ID: 1748211.
    Abstract:
    We studied the plasma clearance and tissue incorporation of intravenously infused purified human plasma fibronectin into various tissues during a period of acute lung vascular injury induced by lethal postoperative bacteremia in sheep. Lung, liver, spleen, and heart tissue were examined for both endogenous sheep tissue fibronectin as well as the experimentally infused human fibronectin using dual-label immunofluorescence. Awake sheep (n = 4) received a postoperative iv infusion of 5 x 10(9) live Pseudomonas over a 60-min infusion interval. Bacterial challenge was started 2 hr after starting the iv fibronectin infusion of purified human plasma fibronectin (100 mg iv bolus; 4 hr iv at 100 mg/hr). Human fibronectin displayed a biphasic rate of clearance from the plasma with entrance into lymph. Human fibronectin readily incorporated in all tissues studied, including the lung which was the focus of vascular injury. Analysis of tissue sections by dual-label immunofluorescence indicated that the exogenous human fibronectin colocalized with the endogenous sheep fibronectin. Thus, the plasma fibronectin concentration may influence the lung vascular barrier due to its incorporation into the tissue pool of fibronectin. Moreover, the plasma may serve as a reservoir for soluble fibronectin which can enter and colocalize with the insoluble tissue pool of fibronectin in various tissues.
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