The effect of organic cosolvents on the oxygen affinity of fetal hemoglobin

1991 ◽  
Vol 39 (2) ◽  
pp. 161-169 ◽  
Author(s):  
Valeria Militello ◽  
Eugenio Vitrano ◽  
Antonio Cupane
1980 ◽  
Vol 238 (1) ◽  
pp. H73-H79 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. A. Mueggler ◽  
G. Jones ◽  
J. S. Peterson ◽  
J. M. Bissonnette ◽  
R. D. Koler ◽  
...  

A rightward shift in the blood oxygen dissociation curve occurs during the 1st mo of canine life. A detailed peptide analysis indicated that dogs do not have a separate fetal hemoglobin. Other erythrocyte components such as ATP, K+, Na+, and H+ were excluded as significant mediators of the postnatal oxygen affinity change. Erythrocyte 2,3-DPG levels essentially zero in fetal dogs, increased rapidly during the 1st mo of canine life. There was a significant correlation between this postnatal 2,3-DPG increase and the postnatal decrease in blood oxygen affinity. Dialyzed hemolysates of fetal or adult canine blood have the same intrinsic oxygen affinity and the same response to normal adult levels of 2,3-DPG. Furthermore, the magnitude and direction of this 2,3-DPG-induced decrease in oxygen affinity in vitro are comparable to the in vivo postnatal change in oxygen affinity.


Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 3588-3588
Author(s):  
Robert Suez Franco ◽  
Peter Ciraolo ◽  
Mary B. Palascak ◽  
Clinton H. Joiner ◽  
Zahida Yasin ◽  
...  

Abstract Percent fetal hemoglobin (HbF) is an important determinant of clinical severity in sickle cells disease (SCD). There is a dichotomous distribution of HbF in sickle cells, with one population containing 20–25% HbF (F cells) and another in which HbF is not detectable (nonF cells). Increased HbF in SCD is due to two factors: 1) Increased HbF synthesis, which also occurs in other conditions having markedly increased erythropoiesis; 2) Longer survival of F cells in the circulation compared to nonF cells, which appears to be of great importance in SCD. We previously showed the lifespan of biotin-labeled F cells in the circulation to be about three times longer than nonF cells. We now examine these differences in greater detail, focusing on two issues. The first is whether the range of HbF content (HbF per F cell, pg) that is presumably present in F cells influences cell survival. The second is whether the survival of F and/or nonF cells is dependent upon the fraction of F cells in the circulation. To address these questions, we used the previously described biotin label for RBC. Up to 10 ml of autologous RBC were labeled and reinfused, and overall RBC survival was defined by the time-dependent disappearance of labeled RBC from the circulation. At selected time points after reinfusion, HbF was evaluated in two ways: 1) The percentage of biotin-labeled cells that were F cells was determined by flow cytometry; 2) The biotin-labeled cells were isolated with streptavidin-coated magnetic beads and the percent HbF determined by HPLC. These two assays can be used to determine the individual survival of F and nonF cells and to calculate the HbF per F cell of labeled RBC as a function of time after reinfusion. There were 12 studies in 10 patients, including 2 who were studied before and after hydroxyurea (HU). A total of 4 patients were taking HU at the time of study. F cells ranged from 4 to 90%, including 2 patients with HU and one without who had greater than 88%. There was a time-dependent linear increase in HbF per F cell with a slope of 0.09 ± 0.07 pg/day (n = 11). This is consistent with longer survival of the F cells with higher HbF content. NonF cell survival was lower in patients with a higher percentage of F cells. Subjects with < 50% F cells had an S30 (time until 30% of the labeled RBC remain in the circulation, days) for nonF cells of 14.6 ± 2.9 days (1 SD, n = 5), whereas subjects with > 50% F cells had an S30 for nonF cells of 7.7 ± 2.9 days (P < 0.005). The range of S30 values was from 5 to 17 days, and there was a linear correlation between the S30 of nonF cells and % F cells with R2 = 0.65. For a given % F cells, there appeared to be no dependence on HU. These data indicate that the survival of nonF cells (but not F cells) is dependent on the percentage of F cells. Possible reasons for this include 1) the presumed higher oxygen affinity of F cells, leading to lower venous PO2 and thus increased sickling and decreased survival of the nonF cells, and 2) a more sensitive detection of damaged RBC by the RES when RBC turnover is lower due to a high percentage of F cells, again leading to decreased survival of the nonF cells. This could have important implications in chronic transfusion therapy, in which overall RBC turnover is decreased by the presence of donor cells with relatively high oxygen affinity.


Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 1074-1074
Author(s):  
Benjamin Vieira ◽  
Vu P. Hong ◽  
Kunal Desai ◽  
Martin K. Safo ◽  
David R. Light

Abstract Sickle cell disease (SCD) is a genetic hemoglobinopathy driven largely by a single codon mutation of the β-globin gene resulting in polymerization of hemoglobin S (HbS). Anti-sickling approaches that involve increasing the oxygen affinity of HbS to treat SCD are under development and offer the potential to directly prevent HbS polymerization and its downstream pathophysiology. Two such compounds, 5-hydroxymethylfurfural (5HMF) and voxelotor (GBT440) have entered clinical trials for SCD with promising results and exert their therapeutic effects by modifying the N-terminus of HbS α-globin chains to form a reversible Schiff base. Formation of this N-terminal adduct stabilizes the oxygen-bound R-state (in the R2 conformation) that increases the oxygen affinity of the altered HbS and delaying the polymerization of HbS. In addition, genetic and small molecule therapies designed to increase fetal hemoglobin (HbF) expression hold great potential for the treatment of SCD. Increasing the percentage of HbF in RBCs significantly slows sickling kinetics without affecting oxygen delivery. Combination approaches of high-O2-Hb modification with HbF inducing therapies clinically could result in increased efficacy in the treatment of SCD, but the impact of hemoglobin modifiers on fetal hemoglobin has not been reported. Our present studies investigated the effects of 5HMF and voxelotor in HbF-rich umbilical cord blood derived RBCs. HbF-rich (60-90%) RBCs were isolated from cord blood and incubated with commercially available 5HMF and voxelotor synthesized in-house. The effect of these compounds on hemoglobin oxygen affinity was determined by measuring the p50 of the oxygen saturation curve in whole cells. Sites of modification were determined directly by incubating compounds with the purified RBC lysate, stabilizing the N-terminal adduct by reduction to the amine, and analysis of the resulting modification by LC-MS. Similar to the reported p50 shifts with normal adult hemoglobin (HbA) and HbS, 5HMF and voxelotor increased the oxygen-binding affinity of HbF with an EC50 of 7.9 mM and 560 mM respectively. 1 mM voxelotor lowered cord RBC p50 to 4 mmHg in vitro. LC-MS analysis showed that 5HMF exclusively modified the N-terminus of the α-globin chain, with no modification of b-globin and g-globin chains. Unexpectedly, the α-globin, β-globin and γ-globin chains were all modified by voxelotor following incubation with cord blood. Voxelotor was also shown to modify both α-globin and the β-globin or βS-globin chains on purified HbA or HbS, respectively. These data contrast with published crystallography data demonstrating that voxelotor selectively modifies a single α-globin chain in CO-ligated HbS (Oksenberg et al 2016). Although anti-sickling aromatic aldehydes have similar effects on the oxygen binding affinity of HbA, HbS and HbF, they can vary in their selectivity for modification of the α-globin and beta-like chains of HbF, HbA, and HbS (Abraham et al. 1995). To further investigate our data with voxelotor and increase our understanding of this class of molecules, other hemoglobin modifying aldehyde molecules such as 5-formylsalicyclic acid (5FSA), tucaresol and velaresol (BW12C) will be examined. Disclosures Vieira: Bioverativ a Sanofi Company: Employment. Hong:Bioverativ a Sanofi Company: Employment, Equity Ownership. Desai:Bioverativ a Sanofi Company: Employment, Equity Ownership. Safo:Bioverativ a Sanofi Company: Consultancy; Virginia Commonwealth University: Employment. Light:Bioverativ a Sanofi Company: Employment, Equity Ownership.


2019 ◽  
Vol 116 (50) ◽  
pp. 25236-25242 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giuseppe Di Caprio ◽  
Ethan Schonbrun ◽  
Bronner P. Gonçalves ◽  
Jose M. Valdez ◽  
David K. Wood ◽  
...  

Sickle cell disease (SCD) is caused by a variant hemoglobin molecule that polymerizes inside red blood cells (RBCs) in reduced oxygen tension. Treatment development has been slow for this typically severe disease, but there is current optimism for curative gene transfer strategies to induce expression of fetal hemoglobin or other nonsickling hemoglobin isoforms. All SCD morbidity and mortality arise directly or indirectly from polymer formation in individual RBCs. Identifying patients at highest risk of complications and treatment candidates with the greatest curative potential therefore requires determining the amount of polymer in individual RBCs under controlled oxygen. Here, we report a semiquantitative measurement of hemoglobin polymer in single RBCs as a function of oxygen. The method takes advantage of the reduced oxygen affinity of hemoglobin polymer to infer polymer content for thousands of RBCs from their overall oxygen saturation. The method enables approaches for SCD treatment development and precision medicine.


1993 ◽  
Vol 264 (3) ◽  
pp. R481-R486
Author(s):  
F. R. Ragsdale ◽  
R. L. Ingermann

Pregnancy in Crotalus viridis oreganus is associated with an increase in the nucleoside triphosphate (NTP) concentration and a concomitant decrease in the oxygen affinity of the adult red blood cell. However, although the red blood cells of non-pregnant adults and fetuses have indistinguishable NTP concentrations, they have different oxygen affinities. Therefore, red blood cell NTP concentrations alone cannot account for the oxygen-affinity difference between fetal and maternal red blood cells. Hemoglobins from adult and fetal snakes had similar intrinsic oxygen affinities; however, adult hemoglobin was more responsive to organic phosphate modulation compared with fetal hemoglobin. Structural differences, indicated by native gel electrophoresis and electrophoresis of the globins under denaturing conditions at high pH, corroborated functional differences of hemoglobins from fetus and adult. Therefore, the biochemical basis for the oxygen-affinity difference between maternal and fetal red blood cells in this rattlesnake appears to be unique. It appears to be caused by a functionally distinct fetal hemoglobin and the pregnancy-associated rise in red blood cell NTP levels in the mother.


Blood ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 75 (10) ◽  
pp. 2070-2075 ◽  
Author(s):  
K Adachi ◽  
J Kim ◽  
T Asakura ◽  
E Schwartz

Abstract The effect of differences in G gamma and A gamma fractions of fetal hemoglobin (HbF) on the kinetics of polymerization of HbS-HbF mixtures was studied. We also examined their effect on oxygen affinity, surface hydrophobicity, mechanical stability, and solubility of HbF. Differences in G gamma:A gamma ratio did not affect the polymerization of mixtures of HbF and HbS, suggesting that the inhibitory effect of HbF on the polymerization of HbS is independent of the G gamma:A gamma ratio of HbF and is totally dependent on the fraction of HbF in the mixture. The oxygen equilibrium curve of HbF was not affected by differences in the ratios of G gamma and A gamma in HbF. In contrast, surface hydrophobicity, mechanical stability, and solubility of HbF were affected by differences in the G gamma:A gamma ratio. The higher the G gamma:A gamma ratio, the smaller the elution volume on a TSK Gel SW hydrophobic column in high phosphate buffer. The mechanical stability of HbF was also dependent on the ratio of G gamma:A gamma; stability was greater at higher fractions of A gamma. Differences in the G gamma:A gamma ratio also affected solubility of HbF: HbF containing the higher fraction of G gamma was the more soluble. These data indicate that although alanine at the 136th position of the gamma chains has a stronger surface hydrophobicity than does glycine, this difference does not affect either the polymerization of HbS or the oxygen affinity of HbF.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 85-85 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laurel G. Mendelsohn ◽  
Leah Pedoeim ◽  
Eduard J. van Beers ◽  
Rehan Saiyed ◽  
James S Nichols ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 85 Background: Aes-103 (5-hydroxymethylfurfural, 5-HMF) is a putative anti-sickling agent that has undergone pre-clinical testing for potential treatment for sickle cell anemia (SCA). It is an organic compound derived from dehydration of certain sugars, found commonly in small amounts in foods such as coffee and prunes. It binds to alpha subunits of hemoglobin and increases its oxygen affinity. At millimolar levels, it inhibits hypoxia-induced sickling in vitro and when dosed orally it protects sickle cell mice against hypoxia-induced death. We investigate the in vitro effects of a range of concentrations of Aes-103 on oxygen affinity and red cell stability in blood from healthy volunteers, and from patients with SCA with or without hydroxyurea treatment. Methods: Blood specimens from healthy control adults and adults with SCA were incubated in vitro with a range of concentrations of Aes-103 between 0.1 and 5 mM for one hour at 37 degrees C. Oxygen equilibrium curves were determined for each sample using the HemOx Analyzer. Samples were diluted in HemOx buffer and then loaded into the Analyzer, which exposed the samples to increasing partial pressure and then deoxygenated with nitrogen gas to produce the oxygen equilibrium curve. The P50 value for each curve was determined at the oxygen tension that produced 50% oxygen saturation. In additional experiments, samples of human control blood and SCA blood were treated with Aes-103 and incubated at 37°C for 1 hr, and then the samples in tubes were subjected to shear stress by rotation on a vertical rotator at 21 revolutions per minute for 3 hrs. The samples were centrifuged for 2 minutes and plasma was collected and free hemoglobin levels as an indicator of red cell membrane disruption were measured by ELISA. Results: Blood samples from SCA patients off hydroxyurea (n=6) without Aes-103 tended to have higher baseline p50 values than healthy controls (n=6)(30.3 ± 1.1 vs. 28.3 ± 0.8 torr, p=0.15), consistent with previous reports of high intracellular 2,3-DPG, known to increase P50. The P50 remained right shifted in SCA compared to controls at Aes-103 concentration below 1mM, converging with controls at higher concentrations (p=0.035). At baseline, P50 of SCA patients on chronic hydroxyurea (n=9) was significantly lower than SCA patients not on hydroxyurea (26.3 ± 0.8 vs. 30.3 ± 1.1 torr, p=0.008), compatible with the lower P50 contributed by fetal hemoglobin induced by hydroxyurea. At every concentration of Aes-103, P50 was lower for specimens SCA on hydroxyurea compared to those off hydroxyurea (p<0.001) (Figure 1A). Overall, the delta decrease in P50 from baseline in all subjects at all concentrations of Aes-103 was comparable, on regression analysis showing −2.16 torr for each mM increase in Aes-103 (r2=0.64, p<0.001). In vitro shear stress under normoxia promoted hemolysis in blood samples from patients with SCA compared to baseline (n=10, free hemoglobin 29.4 ± 3.4 vs. 8.4 ± 0.9 uM, p<0.001). Addition of Aes-103 at increasing concentrations reduced the extent of shear-stress induced hemolysis, by 15% at 1mM Aes-103; by 28% at 2mM Aes-103; and by 37% at 5mM Aes-103 (p<0.001, Figure 1B). Interestingly, although shear stress promoted less hemolysis in blood samples from healthy controls, Aes-103 at these concentrations also reduced this hemolysis to a comparable extent, suggesting a red cell stabilizing mechanism distinct from anti-sickling effect. Shear stress experiments under hypoxic conditions are underway. In pilot experiments using an imaging flow cytometry assay described in detail in a separate abstract, Aes-103 showed preliminary ability to repress sickling induced by hypoxia in vitro. Conclusions: Red cells from SCA adults treated with hydroxyurea have significantly higher affinity for oxygen than those from patients not treated with hydroxyurea, presumably related in part to the high affinity of fetal hemoglobin induced by the drug. Aes-103 increases oxygen affinity in sickle erythrocytes in a concentration-dependent fashion, and this effect is even more prominent when combined with that of hydroxyurea. Aes-103 at high concentrations stabilizes red cells against shear stress in vitro. With our collaborators at AesRx, LLC, a phase 1 safety and pharmacokinetics study of Aes-103 in healthy volunteers has been completed and we now are conducting a similar study at the NIH Clinical Center in adults with sickle cell anemia. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


1979 ◽  
Vol 237 (6) ◽  
pp. H668-H675 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Lister ◽  
T. K. Walter ◽  
H. T. Versmold ◽  
P. R. Dallman ◽  
A. M. Rudolph

After birth a decrease in hemoglobin concentration occurs while high metabolic demands are imposed on the infant by the extrauterine environment. Using the resting lamb as a model, we studied the mechanisms that are called into play during this period to maintain oxygen delivery. Measurements were made of oxygen consumption, arterial and mixed venous blood oxygen contents, cardiac output, hemoglobin concentration, percent fetal hemoglobin, 2,3-diphosphoglycerate, and hemoglobin oxygen affinity during the first two postnatal months. There was a rapid decrease in hemoglobin concentration after birth and concomitant decrease in hemoglobin oxygen affinity, changes similar to those described in humans. Cardiac output and oxygen consumption were both very high immediately after birth and declined in parallel, so that arteriovenous oxygen content difference was constant. Thus at rest cardiac output varies as a result of the changing need for oxygen. This relationship is independent of hemoglobin concentration or oxygen affinity within the normal range. If, however, oxygen demands were increased, oxygen delivery might be compromised by a limited ability to increase oxygen extraction during the immediate newborn period or when hemoglobin concentration is lowest.


Blood ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 90 (8) ◽  
pp. 2916-2920 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kazuhiko Adachi ◽  
Patrick Konitzer ◽  
Jian Pang ◽  
Konda S. Reddy ◽  
Saul Surrey

Abstract To clarify the role of γN-terminal Gly, γ5 Glu, and γ143 Ser in 2, 3-biphosphosphoglycerate (BPG) binding to fetal hemoglobin (Hb F ), we engineered and produced normal human Hb F and two Hb F variants (Hb F γG1V, γS143H, and Hb F γG1V, γE5P, γS143H) using a yeast expression system and then compared their oxygen-binding properties with those of native human Hb F and adult Hb (Hb A). Oxygen affinity of Hb F γG1V, γS143H in the absence of 2, 3-BPG was slightly higher than that of normal Hb F. The decrease in oxygen affinities for Hb F γG1V, γS143H with increasing 2, 3-BPG concentrations was larger than that of normal Hb F, but significantly less than that of Hb A. In contrast, oxygen affinities of Hb F γG1V, γE5P, γS143H in the absence and presence of 2, 3-BPG were much lower than those of Hb F γG1V, γS143H and were similar to those of Hb A. These results indicate that differences between Pro and Glu at the A2 position in the A helix in Hb A and Hb F, respectively, are critical for reduced binding of 2, 3-BPG to Hb F, even though β5 Pro does not interact directly with 2, 3-BPG in Hb A. Hb F variants such as Hb F γG1V, γE5P, γS143H, which exhibit reduced oxygen affinity, should facilitate design of efficient antisickling fetal Hb variants for potential use in gene therapy for sickle cell disease.


Blood ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 75 (10) ◽  
pp. 2070-2075
Author(s):  
K Adachi ◽  
J Kim ◽  
T Asakura ◽  
E Schwartz

The effect of differences in G gamma and A gamma fractions of fetal hemoglobin (HbF) on the kinetics of polymerization of HbS-HbF mixtures was studied. We also examined their effect on oxygen affinity, surface hydrophobicity, mechanical stability, and solubility of HbF. Differences in G gamma:A gamma ratio did not affect the polymerization of mixtures of HbF and HbS, suggesting that the inhibitory effect of HbF on the polymerization of HbS is independent of the G gamma:A gamma ratio of HbF and is totally dependent on the fraction of HbF in the mixture. The oxygen equilibrium curve of HbF was not affected by differences in the ratios of G gamma and A gamma in HbF. In contrast, surface hydrophobicity, mechanical stability, and solubility of HbF were affected by differences in the G gamma:A gamma ratio. The higher the G gamma:A gamma ratio, the smaller the elution volume on a TSK Gel SW hydrophobic column in high phosphate buffer. The mechanical stability of HbF was also dependent on the ratio of G gamma:A gamma; stability was greater at higher fractions of A gamma. Differences in the G gamma:A gamma ratio also affected solubility of HbF: HbF containing the higher fraction of G gamma was the more soluble. These data indicate that although alanine at the 136th position of the gamma chains has a stronger surface hydrophobicity than does glycine, this difference does not affect either the polymerization of HbS or the oxygen affinity of HbF.


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