Laxman Poudel , Elmira Alipour , Silvie Suriany , Honglei Liu , Stephen R. Baker , Thilini Karunarathna , Alex George , Jon Detterich , Daniel B. Kim-Shapiro
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Nitrite is reduced to nitric oxide (NO) by deoxygenated hemoglobin contributing to vasodilation, decreasing platelet activation, decreasing cellular adhesion to activated endothelium, and decreasing red cell hemolysis; all of which could ameliorate patient morbidities. Previous work on extracellular hemoglobin has shown that solution phase HbS reduces nitrite to NO faster than normal adult hemoglobin (HbA), while polymerized HbS reduces nitrite slower than HbA. In this work, we compared the rate of nitrite reduction to NO measured by the formation of nitrosyl hemoglobin in sickle and normal red blood cells at varying hemoglobin oxygen saturations. We found the overall rate of nitrite reduction between normal and sickle red blood cells was similar and confirmed this result under partially oxygenated conditions, but normal red blood cells reduced nitrite faster than sickle red blood cells under anoxia where HbS polymerization is maximal. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
镰状细胞性贫血是由编码血红蛋白 beta 亚基的基因发生单个突变引起的。由于这种突变,镰状细胞血红蛋白(HbS)会在缺氧条件下发生聚合,从而降低红细胞的变形能力,导致多种病理效应,造成严重的发病率和死亡率。多项临床前研究和人体研究表明,阴离子亚硝酸盐对镰状细胞病患者有潜在的治疗作用。亚硝酸盐被脱氧血红蛋白还原成一氧化氮(NO),有助于扩张血管、减少血小板活化、减少细胞对活化内皮的粘附以及减少红细胞溶血;所有这些都能改善患者的发病率。以前关于细胞外血红蛋白的研究表明,溶液相 HbS 将亚硝酸盐还原为 NO 的速度比正常成人血红蛋白(HbA)快,而聚合 HbS 还原亚硝酸盐的速度比 HbA 慢。在这项工作中,我们比较了镰状红细胞和正常红细胞在不同血红蛋白氧饱和度下通过亚硝基血红蛋白的形成测量亚硝酸盐还原为 NO 的速率。我们发现正常红细胞和镰状红细胞还原亚硝酸盐的总体速度相似,并在部分氧合条件下证实了这一结果,但在缺氧条件下,正常红细胞还原亚硝酸盐的速度比镰状红细胞快,因为在缺氧条件下,HbS 的聚合度最高。这些结果与之前使用细胞外血红蛋白进行的研究结果一致,在部分含氧条件下,溶液相 HbS 的还原速度弥补了聚合物相 HbS 较慢的还原速度,但在完全缺氧的情况下,聚合物相动力学占主导地位。
Nitrosyl Hemoglobin Formation from Nitrite in Normal and Sickle Blood
Sickle cell anemia is caused by a single mutation in the gene encoding the beta subunit of hemoglobin. Due to this mutation, sickle cell hemoglobin (HbS) polymerizes under hypoxic conditions, decreasing red blood cell deformability and leading to multiple pathological effects that cause substantial morbidity and mortality. Several pre-clinical and human studies have demonstrated that the anion nitrite has potential therapeutic benefits for patients with sickle cell disease. Nitrite is reduced to nitric oxide (NO) by deoxygenated hemoglobin contributing to vasodilation, decreasing platelet activation, decreasing cellular adhesion to activated endothelium, and decreasing red cell hemolysis; all of which could ameliorate patient morbidities. Previous work on extracellular hemoglobin has shown that solution phase HbS reduces nitrite to NO faster than normal adult hemoglobin (HbA), while polymerized HbS reduces nitrite slower than HbA. In this work, we compared the rate of nitrite reduction to NO measured by the formation of nitrosyl hemoglobin in sickle and normal red blood cells at varying hemoglobin oxygen saturations. We found the overall rate of nitrite reduction between normal and sickle red blood cells was similar and confirmed this result under partially oxygenated conditions, but normal red blood cells reduced nitrite faster than sickle red blood cells under anoxia where HbS polymerization is maximal. These results are consistent with previous work using extracellular hemoglobin where the rate of reduction by solution phase HbS makes up for the slower reduction by polymer phase HbS under partially oxygenated conditions, but the polymer phase kinetics dominates in the complete absence of oxygen.
期刊介绍:
Free Radical Biology and Medicine is a leading journal in the field of redox biology, which is the study of the role of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and other oxidizing agents in biological systems. The journal serves as a premier forum for publishing innovative and groundbreaking research that explores the redox biology of health and disease, covering a wide range of topics and disciplines. Free Radical Biology and Medicine also commissions Special Issues that highlight recent advances in both basic and clinical research, with a particular emphasis on the mechanisms underlying altered metabolism and redox signaling. These Special Issues aim to provide a focused platform for the latest research in the field, fostering collaboration and knowledge exchange among researchers and clinicians.