The formation of transferrin receptor-positive sickle reticulocytes with intermediate density is not determined by fetal hemoglobin content.
نویسندگان
چکیده
Erythrocyte dehydration is an important feature of sickle cell disease, leading to increased sickle hemoglobin polymerization and decreased red blood cell survival. Substantial in vivo dehydration appears to occur in reticulocytes or in an even younger subset of reticulocytes that are positive for transferrin receptor. Previous studies have suggested both sickling-dependent and sickling-independent components of dehydration for these cells. Two types of investigations are reported here. The first series of experiments explored the possibility that fetal hemoglobin (HbF) content influences the in vivo dehydration of very young, transferrin receptor-positive (T+) cells. These studies confirmed that in most patients the T+ cells in the densest fraction lacked HbF (T+ F-). However, T+ F- and T+ F+ cells appeared to have the same tendency to become moderately dense. The second type of investigation examined moderately dense T+ cells with normalized K+ content and determined the effect of HbF content on KCl cotransport-mediated dehydration in oxygenated incubations. Under these conditions, both T+ F- and T+ F+ cells had an equal tendency to become more dense by this pathway. Taken together, these studies indicate that at least some young sickle cells become moderately dense due to higher KCl cotransport activity independent of HbF content (and by inference, independent of sickling). However, to become very dense, it appears that further dehydration through a sickling-mediated pathway is required. We suggest that the dehydration of young sickle cells occurs in two steps, with the first dominated by KCl cotransport and the second having an important sickling-dependent component.
منابع مشابه
Fetal hemoglobin and potassium in isolated transferrin receptor-positive dense sickle reticulocytes.
A subset of sickle cells have an increased density at the reticulocyte stage of development, indicating that they are either abnormally dense upon release from the bone marrow or become dense quickly in the circulation. These cells are of interest because they most likely have severely disrupted cation regulation and a short lifespan. Based on the distribution of fetal hemoglobin (HbF) in the d...
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The K+ efflux that mediates sickle-cell dehydration may occur through several pathways, including two with a high capacity for mediating rapid K+ loss, KCI cotransport and the Ca2+-dependent K’ channel [K(CaZ+)I. The rate and pathway of red blood cell (RBC) dehydration most likely depends on cell age and hemoglobin (Hb) composition, with the presence of HbF playing an important role. Oxygenated...
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The K+ efflux that mediates sickle-cell dehydration may occur through several pathways, including two with a high capacity for mediating rapid K+ loss, KCl cotransport and the Ca(2+)-dependent K+ channel [K(Ca2+)]. The rate and pathway of red blood cell (RBC) dehydration most likely depends on cell age and hemoglobin (Hb) composition, with the presence of HbF playing an important role. Oxygenat...
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What causes the gradual decrease of fetal hemoglobin in the normal maturing infant, or the persistence of fetal hemoglobin in the blood of adults with certain congenital anemias, especially thalassemia, is not known. The production of fetal hemoglobin is evidently determined by genes nonallelic with those regulating adult hemoglobin formation (1). The fact that all red cells can be sickled in s...
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عنوان ژورنال:
- Blood
دوره 90 8 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 1997