scholarly journals Studies of Human Erythrocyte Catalase by Fluorescent Antibody Technic The Distribution of Catalase in Acatalasia and Hypocatalasia

Blood ◽  
1969 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 25-31
Author(s):  
TAKEMITSU HOSOI ◽  
SEIJI YAHARA ◽  
HOWARD B. HAMILTON ◽  
NORIO FUJIKI ◽  
TERUO SASAKI ◽  
...  

Abstract In order to investigate the cellular distribution of catalase in normal, hypocatalasic and acatalasic red blood cells, the fluorescent antibody labelling technic was employed. Sensitive anticatalase sera were produced in rabbits by immunization with purified catalase extracted from human erythrocytes. Specificity against human erythrocyte catalase was confirmed by Ouchterlony’s double diffusion method. The distribution of catalase is fairly homogeneous in normal and hypocatalasic red cells, but in acatalasic cells fluorescence due to the presence of catalase was not observed. By this method the amount of catalase in hypocatalasic red cells was judged to be between that of normal and acatalasic red cells.

1991 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 213-221 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Hartmann ◽  
R. Glaser

The effect of chlorpromazine (CPZ) on the shape of human erythrocytes with different values of transmembrane potential (TMP) was investigated. The shape of red blood cells with negative values of the TMP remained unchanged after the formation of stomatocytes by chlorpromazine, while cells with positive TMP showed a characteristic time course of shape change during the incubation with CPZ. Experiments with vanadate show that this might be due to a difference in the activity of the phospholipid-translocase at different values of TMP.


1974 ◽  
Vol 31 (01) ◽  
pp. 012-019
Author(s):  
Leszek Uszyński

SummaryFactor VIII-coated red blood cells had an evident corrective effect on plasma of haemophiliacs with inhibitors. This effect was especially significant when tanned coated red cells were used. The direct coating of washed red blood cells by factor VIII concentrates is also feasible. The results were better with fraction C-I (AHG concentrate containing dextran) than with fibrinogen-free concentrate. It seems that dextran enhances the attachment of factor VIII to human erythrocytes. In the direct coating-procedure the time of incubation was important, but temperature and pH were not critical. The results obtained indicate that factor VIII attached to red blood cells is more resistant to inhibitors than factor VIII in solution.The possibility of using factor VIII-coated red cells for the management of patients with antibodies to factor VIII is discussed.


1974 ◽  
Vol 63 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hava Peretz ◽  
Zivia Toister ◽  
Yehudith Laster ◽  
Abraham Loyter

Sendai virus is able to induce the fusion of human erythrocytes. Bivalent cations or ATP are not essential for polyerythrocyte formation. High fusion indices were obtained when Sendai virus was added to cells incubated in the presence of both EDTA and iodoacetic acid. Human erythrocyte ghosts prepared by gradual hemolysis still retain the potential to undergo virus-induced fusion. Fusion of human red blood cells without the addition of viruses was obtained by incubation of erythrocytes at pH 10.5 in the presence of Ca++ (40 mM) or by addition of phospholipase C Clostridium perfringens preparations to cells previously agglutinated or polylysine.


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.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2 (20) ◽  
pp. 2581-2587 ◽  
Author(s):  
Innocent Safeukui ◽  
Pierre A. Buffet ◽  
Guillaume Deplaine ◽  
Sylvie Perrot ◽  
Valentine Brousse ◽  
...  

Abstract The current paradigm in the pathogenesis of several hemolytic red blood cell disorders is that reduced cellular deformability is a key determinant of splenic sequestration of affected red cells. Three distinct features regulate cellular deformability: membrane deformability, surface area-to-volume ratio (cell sphericity), and cytoplasmic viscosity. By perfusing normal human spleens ex vivo, we had previously showed that red cells with increased sphericity are rapidly sequestered by the spleen. Here, we assessed the retention kinetics of red cells with decreased membrane deformability but without marked shape changes. A controlled decrease in membrane deformability (increased membrane rigidity) was induced by treating normal red cells with increasing concentrations of diamide. Following perfusion, diamide-treated red blood cells (RBCs) were rapidly retained in the spleen with a mean clearance half-time of 5.9 minutes (range, 4.0-13.0). Splenic clearance correlated positively with increased membrane rigidity (r = 0.93; P < .0001). To determine to what extent this increased retention was related to mechanical blockade in the spleen, diamide-treated red cells were filtered through microsphere layers that mimic the mechanical sensing of red cells by the spleen. Diamide-treated red cells were retained in the microsphilters (median, 7.5%; range, 0%-38.6%), although to a lesser extent compared with the spleen (median, 44.1%; range, 7.3%-64.0%; P < .0001). Taken together, these results have implications for understanding the sensitivity of the human spleen to sequester red cells with altered cellular deformability due to various cellular alterations and for explaining clinical heterogeneity of RBC membrane disorders.


1969 ◽  
Vol 129 (4) ◽  
pp. 757-774 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nabih I. Abdou ◽  
Maxwell Richter

Irradiated rabbits given allogeneic bone marrow cells from normal adult donors responded to an injection of sheep red blood cells by forming circulating antibodies. Their spleen cells were also capable of forming many plaques using the hemolysis in gel technique, and were also capable of undergoing blastogenesis and mitosis and of incorporating tritiated thymidine upon exposure to the specific antigen in vitro. However, irradiated rabbits injected with allogeneic bone marrow obtained from rabbits injected with sheep red blood cells 24 hr prior to sacrifice (primed donors) were incapable of mounting an immune response after stimulation with sheep red cells. This loss of reactivity by the bone marrow from primed donors is specific for the antigen injected, since the immune response of the irradiated recipients to a non-cross-reacting antigen, the horse red blood cell, is unimpaired. Treatment of the bone marrow donors with high-titered specific antiserum to sheep red cells for 24 hr prior to sacrifice did not result in any diminished ability of their bone marrow cells to transfer antibody-forming capacity to sheep red blood cells. The significance of these results, with respect to the origin of the antigen-reactive and antibody-forming cells in the rabbit, is discussed.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1951 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 117-127
Author(s):  
ALEXANDER S. WIENER ◽  
IRVING B. WEXLER

A simplified method of treating erythroblastosis by exchange transfusion is described in which the patient is bled and simultaneously transfused with compatible packed red cells. A table is presented which gives the final hematocrit and percentage of inagglutinable red blood cells in the patient's body at the termination of the exchange transfusion, in relation to the patient's initial hematocrit and the amount of blood exchanged. An exchange transfusion with 100 to 150 cc. of packed cells appears to be adequate regardless of the severity of the anemia. Statistical analysis of the result of 106 exchange transfusions shows a progressive drop in mortality rate from 23.7% in 38 cases treated with 500 cc. of whole citrated blood, to 14.6 cc. in 48 cases treated with 1,000 cc. of whole citrated blood, and to 10.0% in 20 cases treated with 120 cc. of packed cells. While the improvement may be accidental, there is no doubt that exchange transfusion with packed cells is a simpler procedure which avoids the introduction into the patient's body of large amounts of adult plasma, and potentially toxic doses of citrate and calcium. Two cases are described in detail which have unusual serologic and clinical features and illustrate the types of problems which may arise when treating erythroblastotic babies.


Blood ◽  
1974 ◽  
Vol 43 (3) ◽  
pp. 411-415 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuet Wai Kan ◽  
David G. Nathan ◽  
Gabriel Cividalli ◽  
Marie C. Crookston

Abstract Fetal red blood cells were concentrated from mixtures of maternal and fetal cells by differential agglutination with anti-i serum. This method will be useful for prenatal diagnosis of hemoglobinopathies when blood obtained from the fetus is heavily contaminated by maternal cells. The method is practical, except in very rare cases in which the maternal red cells are strongly agglutinated by anti-i.


1926 ◽  
Vol 43 (1) ◽  
pp. 111-106
Author(s):  
Hobart A. Reimann ◽  
Louis A. Julianelle

A study has been made of the variation in number of the blood platelets, and the red and white blood cells of white mice injected with pneumococcus extract. The blood platelets were greatly diminished after the injection, the greatest decrease usually occurring after 24 hours. Purpuric lesions usually developed when the number of blood platelets became less than 500,000 per c.mm. Regeneration of the platelets was accomplished by the 4th to the 9th day but there was an overregeneration and the return to normal did not take place until 2 weeks had elapsed. The red cells were also greatly reduced in number, but the rate of their destruction and regeneration was somewhat slower than that of the platelets. The leucocytes were slightly if at all influenced by the pneumococcus extract. Pneumococcus extracts were shown to be thrombolytic and hemolytic. Heat destroyed the activity of both the lysins in vitro. Heated extract produced purpura in mice but did not cause a severe anemia. Extracts adsorbed with either blood platelets or red blood cells showed a marked diminution in their thrombolytic and hemolytic activity in vitro. Such extracts, however, produced purpura as well as severe anemia and thrombopenia in mice.


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