scholarly journals Interaction of Mercury with Human Erythrocytes

1962 ◽  
Vol 45 (3) ◽  
pp. 395-410 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Weed ◽  
J. Eber ◽  
A. Rothstein

The binding of mercury to red blood cells was measured in terms of Hg203 uptake and desorption. The significant features of the binding are: (a) rapid achievement of equilibrium (3 to 5 minutes); (b) release of a Hg-complexing material from the red cells themselves which distorts the binding curves at low concentrations of metal (2.5 x 10-7 to 5.0 x 10-6 M); (c) prevention of binding by cysteine, glutathione, penicillamine, and EDTA but not by imidazole or histidine; (d) binding of mercury in amounts up to 7 times the reduced glutathione concentration of the cells before combination with glutathione itself; (e) binding primarily to sulfhydryl groups of hemoglobin and to a small number of stromal sulfhydryl groups, but also to other non-sulfhydryl cellular ligands after saturation of the sulfhydryl groups. Associated with the binding is inhibition of glucose uptake, induction of loss of K+, and decrease in osmotic fragility. These effects increase over the range of concentrations (1 x 10-17 to 1 x 10-15 moles of Hg/RBC) well below those that result in saturation of the cellular binding sites; above 1 x 10-15 moles/RBC, the effects decrease as the cells become saturated.

PEDIATRICS ◽  
1955 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 54-62
Author(s):  
Clare N. Shumway ◽  
Gerald Miller ◽  
Lawrence E. Young

Ten infants with hemolytic disease of the newborn due to ABO incompatibility were studied. In every case the investigations were undertaken because of jaundice occurring in the first 24 hours of life. The clinical, hematologic and serologic observations in the infants and the serologic findings in the maternal sera are described. Evidence is presented to show that the diagnosis of the disorder rests largely upon the demonstration of spherocytosis, increased osmotic fragility of the red cells, reticulocytosis, and hyperbilirubinemia in a newborn infant whose red blood cells are incompatible with the maternal major blood group isoantibody and against whose cells no other maternal isoantibody is demonstrable. The anti-A or anti-B in each of the maternal sera tested in this series hemolyzed A or B cells in the presence of complement. Other serologic findings in the maternal sera were less consistently demonstrated.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-9
Author(s):  
Krzysztof Gwozdzinski ◽  
Anna Pieniazek ◽  
Joanna Bernasinska-Slomczewska ◽  
Joanna Brzeszczynska ◽  
Robert Irzmanski ◽  
...  

Purpose. Comprehensive cardiac rehabilitation (CCR) is a complex program aimed at improving the health status of patients with coronary artery disease (CAD), especially those who have been subjected to cardiac interventions (PCI and CABG).The aim of this study was to measure the changes in the properties of red blood cells (RBCs) in men with CAD after cardiac intervention and after participation in CCR program. Methods. In this study, we have investigated the influence of the physical training-based CCR program in 12 men with CAD, after PCI or CABG. The characteristics of RBCs including the basic morphology of RBCs, the conformational state of RBC membrane protein and hemoglobin, acetylcholinesterase activity, membrane fluidity, the osmotic fragility, and thiol concentration in membrane and in hemolysate were measured. Ascorbate concentration and reduced glutathione were also determined. The analysis was performed in men, before and after participation in CCR. The properties of RBCs were observed in connection with the exercise test, and parameters were evaluated before, immediately after, and 1 hour after the exercise test. Results. After CCR, a decrease in the mobility of erythrocyte membrane proteins was observed, which was accompanied by a decrease in lipid fluidity. In addition, immediately after the exercise test and 1 hour later, we measured a decrease in thiol level in hemolysate, but not in the plasma membrane. Unexpectedly, an increase in reduced glutathione concentration one hour after the exercise test after completing comprehensive cardiac rehabilitation was observed. Conclusion. CCR in men with CAD after cardiac intervention is connected with decreased membrane fluidity and decreased membrane protein mobility, which indicates that reduction of oxidative changes in these components occurs.


1974 ◽  
Vol 64 (5) ◽  
pp. 536-550 ◽  
Author(s):  
John R. Sachs ◽  
Philip B. Dunham ◽  
Donna L. Kropp ◽  
J. Clive Ellory ◽  
Joseph F. Hoffman

The characteristics of the interaction of Na-K pumps of high potassium (HK) and low potassium (LK) goat red blood cells with ouabain have been determined. The rate of inhibition by ouabain of the pump of HK cells is greater than the rate of inhibition of the pumps of LK cells. Treatment of LK cells with an antibody (anti-L) raised in HK sheep by injecting LK sheep red cells increases the rate of inhibition of the LK pumps by ouabain to that characteristic of HK pumps; reduction of intracellular K (Kc) in LK cells increases the rate at which ouabain inhibits their pumps and exposure of these low Kc cells to anti-L does not affect the rate of inhibition. There is considerable heterogeneity in the pumps of both HK and LK cells in the rate at which they interact with ouabain or the rate at which they pump or both. LK pumps which are sensitive to stimulation by anti-L bind ouabain less rapidly than the remainder of the LK pumps and exposure to antibody increases the rate at which ouabain binds to the sensitive pumps; the difference between the two types of pumps disappears if intracellular K is very low. The calculated number of ouabain molecules bound at 100% inhibition of the pump is about the same for HK and LK cells. Although exposure to anti-L increases the apparent number of ouabain binding sites in LK cells at normal Kc, it does not alter the apparent number of sites in LK cells when Kc has been reduced.


1974 ◽  
Vol 63 (4) ◽  
pp. 389-414 ◽  
Author(s):  
John R. Sachs ◽  
J. Clive Ellory ◽  
Donna L. Kropp ◽  
Philip B. Dunham ◽  
Joseph F. Hoffman

The kinetic characteristics of the Na:K pump in high potassium (HK) and low potassium (LK) goat red cells were investigated after altering the intracellular cation concentrations. At low concentrations of intracellular K (Kc), increasing Kc at first stimulates the active K influx in HK cells, but at higher Kc the pump is inhibited. These results suggest that in HK cells Kc acts both at a stimulatory site at the inner aspect of the pump and by competition with intracellular Na (Nac) at the Na translocation sites. In LK cells, Kc inhibits the active K influx and the sensitivity of LK cells to inhibition is much greater than the sensitivity of HK cells. Exposure of LK cells to an antibody (anti-L), raised in an HK sheep by injection of LK sheep cells, increased the active K influx at any given Kc. The effect of the antibody was greater at higher intracellular K concentrations, and in cells with very low concentrations of K the antibody had little effect on the pump rate. The failure of anti-L to stimulate the pump in low Kc LK cells was not due to failure of the antibody to bind to the cells. Anti-L combining at the outer surface of the cell reduces the affinity of the pump at the inner surface for K at the inhibitory sites. The maximal pump rate in LK cells at optimal Na and K concentrations is less than the maximal pump rate of HK cells under the same circumstances.


2000 ◽  
Vol 279 (4) ◽  
pp. C981-C989 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. C. Muzyamba ◽  
P. F. Speake ◽  
J. S. Gibson

The effect of oxidants on K+-Cl−cotransport (KCC) was investigated in equine red blood cells. Carbon monoxide mimicked O2. The substituted benzaldehyde, 12C79 (5 mM), markedly increased O2affinity. In N2, however, O2saturation was low (<10%) but KCC remained active. Nitrite (NO2−) oxidized heme to methemoglobin (metHb). High concentrations of NO2−(1 and 5 mM vs. 0.5 mM) increased KCC activity above control levels; it became O2independent but remained sensitive to other stimuli. 1-Chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (1–3 mM) depleted reduced glutathione (GSH). Prolonged exposure (60–120 min, 1 mM) or high concentrations (3 mM) stimulated an O2-independent KCC activity; short exposures and low concentrations (30 min, 0.5 or 1 mM) did not. The effect of these manipulations was correlated with changes in GSH and metHb concentrations. An oxy conformation of Hb was necessary for KCC activation. An increase in its activity over the level found in oxygenated control cells required both accumulation of metHb and depletion of GSH. Findings are relevant to understanding the physiology and pathology of regulation of KCC.


1978 ◽  
Vol 56 (4) ◽  
pp. 860-862 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hyun Dju Kim ◽  
R. E. Isaacks

The osmotic fragility and critical hemolytic volume were determined in red cells obtained from common Amazon fishes including the arawana (Osteoglossum bicirrhosum), the armored catfish (Pterygoplichthys), the electric eel (Electrophorus electrocus), the pirarucu (Arapaima gigas), and the lungfish (Lepidosiren paradoxa). The red cells of the pirarucu and the electric eel displayed the osmotic fragility profile remarkedly akin to human red cells, whereas the red cells of the armored catfish were considerably more resistant to hemolysis than human cells. The arawana cells exhibited a broad shoulder in the region of 120 mM to 70 mM followed by a complete hemolysis near 40 mM NaCl as in other fishes. Unexpectedly, the lungfish red cells were found to be extraordinarily resistant to hemolysis. A 15-min and a 1-h exposure of the lungfish cells to distilled water resulted in hemolysis of 55 and 80%, respectively. The critical hemolytic volume of Amazon fish red cells thus far examined was of the order of 1.83–2.03, except the pirarucu red cells which had a low value of 1.25.


1987 ◽  
Vol 58 (03) ◽  
pp. 936-942 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lindsey A Miles ◽  
Edward F Plow

SummaryGlu-plasminogen binds to platelets; the monocytoid line, U937, and the human fetal fibroblast line, GM1380 bind both plasminogen and its activator, urokinase. This study assesses the interaction of these fibrinolytic proteins with circulating human blood cells. Plasminogen bound minimally to red cells but bound saturably and reversibly to monocytes, granulocytes and lymphocytes with apparent Kd values of 0.9-1.4 μM. The interactions were of high capacity with 1.6 to 49 × 105 sites/cell and involved the lysine binding sites of plasminogen. Both T cells and non-rosetting lymphocytes and two B cell lines saturably bound plasminogen. Urokinase bound saturably to gianulocytes, monocytes, non-rosetting lymphocytes and a B cell line, but minimally to T cells, platelets and red cells. Therefore, plasminogen binding sites of high capacity, of similar affinities, and with common recognition specificities are expressed by many peripheral blood cells. Urokinase receptors are also widely distributed, but less so than plasminogen binding sites. The binding ol plasminogen and/ or urokinase to these cells may lead to generation of cell- associated proteolytic activity which contributes to a variety of cellular functions.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Rui Zhong ◽  
Dingding Han ◽  
Xiaodong Wu ◽  
Hong Wang ◽  
Wanjing Li ◽  
...  

Background: The hypoxic environment stimulates the human body to increase the levels of hemoglobin (HGB) and hematocrit and the number of red blood cells. Such enhancements have individual differences, leading to a wide range of HGB in Tibetans’ whole blood (WB). Study Design: WB of male Tibetans was divided into 3 groups according to different HGB (i.e., A: >120 but ≤185 g/L, B: >185 but ≤210 g/L, and C: >210 g/L). Suspended red blood cells (SRBC) processed by collected WB and stored in standard conditions were examined aseptically on days 1, 14, 21, and 35 after storage. The routine biochemical indexes, deformability, cell morphology, and membrane proteins were tested. Results: Mean corpuscular volume, adenosine triphosphate, pH, and deformability were not different in group A vs. those in storage (p > 0.05). The increased rate of irreversible morphology of red blood cells was different among the 3 groups, but there was no difference in the percentage of red blood cells with an irreversible morphology after 35 days of storage. Group C performed better in terms of osmotic fragility and showed a lower rigid index than group A. Furthermore, SDS-PAGE revealed similar cross-linking degrees of cell membrane protein but the band 3 protein of group C seemed to experience weaker clustering than that of group A as detected by Western Blot analysis after 35 days of storage. Conclusions: There was no difference in deformability or morphological changes in the 3 groups over the 35 days of storage. High HGB levels of plateau SRBC did not accelerate the RBC change from a biconcave disc into a spherical shape and it did not cause a reduction in deformability during 35 days of preservation in bank conditions.


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