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Studying the Pulmonary Endothelium in Health and Disease. An Official American Thoracic Society Workshop Report.

Rebecca F HoughCristina M AlviraJulie A BastaracheSerpil C ErzurumWolfgang M KueblerEric P SchmidtLarissa A ShimodaSteven H AbmanDiego F AlvarezPatrick BelvitchJahar BhattacharyaKonstantin G BirukovStephen Y ChanDavid N CornfieldSteven M DudekJoe G N GarciaElizabeth O HarringtonConnie C W HsiaMohammad Naimul IslamDanny D JonigkVladimir V KalinichenkoTodd M KolbJi Young LeeAkiko MammotoDolly MehtaSharon RoundsJonas C SchuppCiara M ShaverKarthik SureshDhananjay T TambeCorey E VentetuoloMervin C YoderTroy StevensMahendra Damarla
Published in: American journal of respiratory cell and molecular biology (2024)
Lung endothelium resides at the interface between the circulation and the underlying tissue, where it senses biochemical and mechanical properties of both the blood as it flows through the vascular circuit and the vessel wall. Endothelium performs the bidirectional signaling between the blood and tissue compartments that is necessary to maintain homeostasis while physically separating both, facilitating a tightly regulated exchange of water, solutes, cells, and signals. Disruption in endothelial function contributes to vascular disease, which can manifest in discrete vascular locations along the arterial-to-capillary-to-vein axis. While our understanding of mechanisms that contribute to endothelial cell injury and repair in acute and chronic vascular disease have advanced, pathophysiological mechanisms that underlie site-specific vascular disease remain incompletely understood. In an effort to improve the translatability of mechanistic studies of the endothelium, the American Thoracic Society convened a workshop to optimize rigor, reproducibility, and translation of discovery to advance our understanding of endothelial cell function in health and disease.
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