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Imaging Lymphatics in Mouse Lungs

Abstract

Lymphatic malformations and other conditions where lymphatic function is disturbed in the respiratory tract present diagnostic and therapeutic challenges. Advances in lymphatic development, growth regulation, function, and imaging have increased the understanding of lymphatics, but the airways and lungs have not received as much attentions as many other organs. The lung presents challenges for studies of lymphatics because of the complex, densely packed three-dimensional architecture of the airways and vasculature, and because it cannot readily be examined in its entirety. To address this problem, we developed methods for immunohistochemical examination of the lymphatics in mouse lungs, based on approaches we devised for lymphatic vessels and blood vessels in whole mounts of the mouse trachea. This report provides a practical guide for visualizing by fluorescence and confocal microscopy the lymphatics in mouse airways and lungs under normal conditions and in models of disease. Materials and methods are described for immunohistochemical staining of lymphatics in whole mounts of the mouse trachea and 200-μm sections of mouse lung. Also described are mouse models in which lymphatics proliferate in the lung, blocking antibodies for preventing lymphatic growth, methods for fixing mouse lungs by vascular perfusion, and techniques for staining, visualizing, and analyzing lymphatic endothelial cells and other cells in the lung. These methods provide the opportunity to learn as much about lymphatics in the lung as in other organs.

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