Distribution of endogenous albumin across the rat aortic wall as revealed by quantitative immunocytochemistry

Abstract
Endogenous albumin was revealed over thin sections of rat aortic wall, with high resolution and specificity, by applying the protein A–gold immunocytochemical technique. Gold particles, revealing albumin antigenic sites, were observed over plasmalemmal vesicles in endothelial cells and over the interstitial space throughout the thickness of the aortic wall. The distribution of the labeling in the interstitial space varied from region to region and was associated with the collagen fibers, following the orientation of the bundles. The morphometric evaluation of this labeling demonstrated a first peak in labeling intensity in the intima followed by a steep decrease with low levels in the media, and an increasing gradient towards the adventitia. In the subendothelium, a moderate labeling was observed at the base of the endothelial cells of both aortic and capillary endothelia, followed by a decreasing gradient. Ratios between the labeling density in the intima as well as in the adventitia and that in the capillary lumen (plasma albumin) revealed different concentrations of albumin in these compartments. Endogenous albumin, under steady‐state conditions, is thus unevenly distributed over the interstitial spaces across the rat aortic wall, and appears associated along the collagen fibers.