Short survival of phosphatidylserine-exposing red blood cells in murine sickle cell anemia

Blood ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 98 (5) ◽  
pp. 1577-1584 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kitty de Jong ◽  
Renee K. Emerson ◽  
James Butler ◽  
Jacob Bastacky ◽  
Narla Mohandas ◽  
...  

Several transgenic murine models for sickle cell anemia have been developed that closely reproduce the biochemical and physiological disorders in the human disease. A comprehensive characterization is described of hematologic parameters of mature red blood cells, reticulocytes, and red cell precursors in the bone marrow and spleen of a murine sickle cell model in which erythroid cells expressed exclusively human α, γ, and βS globin. Red cell survival was dramatically decreased in these anemic animals, partially compensated by considerable enhancement in erythropoietic activity. As in humans, these murine sickle cells contain a subpopulation of phosphatidylserine-exposing cells that may play a role in their premature removal. Continuous in vivo generation of this phosphatidylserine-exposing subset may have a significant impact on the pathophysiology of sickle cell disease.

Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 136 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 29-30
Author(s):  
Yuanbin Song ◽  
Rana Gbyli ◽  
Liang Shan ◽  
Wei Liu ◽  
Yimeng Gao ◽  
...  

In vivo models of human erythropoiesis with generation of circulating mature human red blood cells (huRBC) have remained elusive, limiting studies of primary human red cell disorders. In our prior study, we have generated the first combined cytokine-liver humanized immunodeficient mouse model (huHepMISTRG-Fah) with fully mature, circulating huRBC when engrafted with human CD34+ hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs)1. Here we present for the first time a humanized mouse model of human sickle cell disease (SCD) which replicates the hallmark pathophysiologic finding of vaso-occlusion in mice engrafted with primary patient-derived SCD HSPCs. SCD is an inherited blood disorder caused by a single point mutation in the beta-globin gene. Murine models of SCD exclusively express human globins in mouse red blood cells in the background of murine globin knockouts2 which exclusively contain murine erythropoiesis and red cells and thus fail to capture the heterogeneity encountered in patients. To determine whether enhanced erythropoiesis and most importantly circulating huRBC in engrafted huHepMISTRG-Fah mice would be sufficient to replicate the pathophysiology of SCD, we engrafted it with adult SCD BM CD34+ cells as well as age-matched control BM CD34+ cells. Overall huCD45+ and erythroid engraftment in BM (Fig. a, b) and PB (Fig. c, d) were similar between control or SCD. Using multispectral imaging flow cytometry, we observed sickling huRBCs (7-11 sickling huRBCs/ 100 huRBCs) in the PB of SCD (Fig. e) but not in control CD34+ (Fig. f) engrafted mice. To determine whether circulating huRBC would result in vaso-occlusion and associated findings in SCD engrafted huHepMISTRG-Fah mice, we evaluated histological sections of lung, liver, spleen, and kidney from control and SCD CD34+ engrafted mice. SCD CD34+ engrafted mice lungs showed an increase in alveolar macrophages (arrowheads) associated with alveolar hemorrhage and thrombosis (arrows) but not observed control engrafted mice (Fig. g). Spleens of SCD engrafted mice showed erythroid precursor expansion, sickled erythrocytes in the sinusoids (arrowheads), and vascular occlusion and thrombosis (arrows) (Fig. h). Liver architecture was disrupted in SCD engrafted mice with RBCs in sinusoids and microvascular thromboses (Fig. i). Congestion of capillary loops and peritubular capillaries and glomeruli engorged with sickled RBCs was evident in kidneys (Fig. j) of SCD but not control CD34+ engrafted mice. SCD is characterized by ineffective erythropoiesis due to structural abnormalities in erythroid precursors3. As a functional structural unit, erythroblastic islands (EBIs) represent a specialized niche for erythropoiesis, where a central macrophage is surrounded by developing erythroblasts of varying differentiation states4. In our study, both SCD (Fig. k) and control (Fig. l) CD34+ engrafted mice exhibited EBIs with huCD169+ huCD14+ central macrophages surrounded by varying stages of huCD235a+ erythroid progenitors, including enucleated huRBCs (arrows). This implies that huHepMISTRG-Fah mice have the capability to generate human EBIs in vivo and thus represent a valuable tool to not only study the effects of mature RBC but also to elucidate mechanisms of ineffective erythropoiesis in SCD and other red cell disorders. In conclusion, we successfully engrafted adult SCD patient BM derived CD34+ cells in huHepMISTRG-Fah mice and detected circulating, sickling huRBCs in the mouse PB. We observed pathological changes in the lung, spleen, liver and kidney, which are comparable to what is seen in the established SCD mouse models and in patients. In addition, huHepMISTRG-Fah mice offer the opportunity to study the role of the central macrophage in human erythropoiesis in health and disease in an immunologically advantageous context. This novel mouse model could therefore serve to open novel avenues for therapeutic advances in SCD. Reference 1. Song Y, Shan L, Gybli R, et. al. In Vivo reconstruction of Human Erythropoiesis with Circulating Mature Human RBCs in Humanized Liver Mistrg Mice. Blood. 2019;134:338. 2. Ryan TM, Ciavatta DJ, Townes TM. Knockout-transgenic mouse model of sickle cell disease. Science. 1997;278(5339):873-876. 3. Blouin MJ, De Paepe ME, Trudel M. Altered hematopoiesis in murine sickle cell disease. Blood. 1999;94(4):1451-1459. 4. Manwani D, Bieker JJ. The erythroblastic island. Curr Top Dev Biol. 2008;82:23-53. Disclosures Xu: Seattle Genetics: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees. Flavell:Zai labs: Consultancy; GSK: Consultancy.


Electronics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 427 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laith Alzubaidi ◽  
Mohammed A. Fadhel ◽  
Omran Al-Shamma ◽  
Jinglan Zhang ◽  
Ye Duan

Sickle cell anemia, which is also called sickle cell disease (SCD), is a hematological disorder that causes occlusion in blood vessels, leading to hurtful episodes and even death. The key function of red blood cells (erythrocytes) is to supply all the parts of the human body with oxygen. Red blood cells (RBCs) form a crescent or sickle shape when sickle cell anemia affects them. This abnormal shape makes it difficult for sickle cells to move through the bloodstream, hence decreasing the oxygen flow. The precise classification of RBCs is the first step toward accurate diagnosis, which aids in evaluating the danger level of sickle cell anemia. The manual classification methods of erythrocytes require immense time, and it is possible that errors may be made throughout the classification stage. Traditional computer-aided techniques, which have been employed for erythrocyte classification, are based on handcrafted features techniques, and their performance relies on the selected features. They also are very sensitive to different sizes, colors, and complex shapes. However, microscopy images of erythrocytes are very complex in shape with different sizes. To this end, this research proposes lightweight deep learning models that classify the erythrocytes into three classes: circular (normal), elongated (sickle cells), and other blood content. These models are different in the number of layers and learnable filters. The available datasets of red blood cells with sickle cell disease are very small for training deep learning models. Therefore, addressing the lack of training data is the main aim of this paper. To tackle this issue and optimize the performance, the transfer learning technique is utilized. Transfer learning does not significantly affect performance on medical image tasks when the source domain is completely different from the target domain. In some cases, it can degrade the performance. Hence, we have applied the same domain transfer learning, unlike other methods that used the ImageNet dataset for transfer learning. To minimize the overfitting effect, we have utilized several data augmentation techniques. Our model obtained state-of-the-art performance and outperformed the latest methods by achieving an accuracy of 99.54% with our model and 99.98% with our model plus a multiclass SVM classifier on the erythrocytesIDB dataset and 98.87% on the collected dataset.


Blood ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 87 (11) ◽  
pp. 4845-4852 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Natarajan ◽  
MM Udden ◽  
LV McIntire

Two factors that are hypothesized to contribute to vasoocclusive crises in sickle cell anemia are increased sickle red blood cell-endothelial cell interactions and damage to endothelium. Despite considerable study, the mechanisms by which erythrocyte-endothelial interactions occur and the role of endothelial damage have not yet been fully elucidated. In this report, we demonstrate that adhesion and damage may be related in a model of vasoocclusion in sickle cell anemia. Phase contrast microscopy coupled to digital image processing was used to determine the adhesion of sickle red blood cells to 1-, 4-, and 24-hour interleukin-I beta (IL-1 beta) stimulated endothelial calls in a parallel plate flow chamber. Morphological alterations to activated endothelial cells after the perfusion of sickle erythrocytes were also identified. Pretreatment of monolayers with 50 pg/mL of IL-1 beta for 1, 4, and 24 hours caused approximately 16-fold increases in adhesion of sickle cells to activated endothelium at all time points. Results with an Arginine-glycine aspartic acid (RGD) peptide and monoclonal antibodies indicated a role for three different endothelial cell receptors: alpha v beta 3 after 1 hour of IL-1 beta stimulation; E- selectin after 4 hours of IL-1 beta stimulation; and vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 after prolonged exposure to cytokines. Perfusion of sickle, but not normal, erythrocytes resulted in alteration of endothelial morphology. Approximately 6% to 8% damage was observed on 4- and 24-hour IL-1 beta stimulated endothelial cells after the perfusion of sickle cells. Damage to 24-hour activated endothelial cells showed a positive correlation (r = .899) with the number of adherent sickle erythrocytes.


Blood ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 64 (1) ◽  
pp. 301-304 ◽  
Author(s):  
LD Petz ◽  
P Yam ◽  
L Wilkinson ◽  
G Garratty ◽  
B Lubin ◽  
...  

We have used the complement-fixing antibody consumption ( CFAC ) test to detect small concentrations of IgG on red blood cells from patients with hemolytic anemias that are not thought to be caused by an immune mechanism. Although patients with hereditary spherocytosis, pyruvate kinase deficiency, and mechanical hemolytic anemias generally had normal concentrations of IgG bound to their red cells (less than 25 molecules IgG per red cell), we found that 39/62 (63%) patients with sickle cell anemia had elevated values. These 39 patients had a mean of 195 and a maximum of 890 molecules of IgG per red cell. None of the patients had been transfused within the previous 90 days, and some had never been transfused. Direct antiglobulin tests were positive in only two instances and autoantibodies were not found in the serum of any patient. However, eluates from the red cells of 6 of 23 patients demonstrated antibody activity against all of a panel of normal red cells by the indirect antiglobulin test. There was no correlation between the number of IgG molecules on patients' red cells and the severity of their anemia, the incidence of painful sickle cell crises, the reticulocyte count, or with blood transfusion history. We conclude that further study of immunohematologic abnormalities in patients with sickle cell anemia is warranted, especially in view of previous reports in this population of patients with red cell autoantibodies, autoimmune hemolytic anemia, hemolytic transfusion reactions without detectable alloantibodies, and an association of some episodes of pain crises with immunologically mediated red cell destruction.


Blood ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 64 (1) ◽  
pp. 301-304 ◽  
Author(s):  
LD Petz ◽  
P Yam ◽  
L Wilkinson ◽  
G Garratty ◽  
B Lubin ◽  
...  

Abstract We have used the complement-fixing antibody consumption ( CFAC ) test to detect small concentrations of IgG on red blood cells from patients with hemolytic anemias that are not thought to be caused by an immune mechanism. Although patients with hereditary spherocytosis, pyruvate kinase deficiency, and mechanical hemolytic anemias generally had normal concentrations of IgG bound to their red cells (less than 25 molecules IgG per red cell), we found that 39/62 (63%) patients with sickle cell anemia had elevated values. These 39 patients had a mean of 195 and a maximum of 890 molecules of IgG per red cell. None of the patients had been transfused within the previous 90 days, and some had never been transfused. Direct antiglobulin tests were positive in only two instances and autoantibodies were not found in the serum of any patient. However, eluates from the red cells of 6 of 23 patients demonstrated antibody activity against all of a panel of normal red cells by the indirect antiglobulin test. There was no correlation between the number of IgG molecules on patients' red cells and the severity of their anemia, the incidence of painful sickle cell crises, the reticulocyte count, or with blood transfusion history. We conclude that further study of immunohematologic abnormalities in patients with sickle cell anemia is warranted, especially in view of previous reports in this population of patients with red cell autoantibodies, autoimmune hemolytic anemia, hemolytic transfusion reactions without detectable alloantibodies, and an association of some episodes of pain crises with immunologically mediated red cell destruction.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 200-210
Author(s):  
Sagar Yeruva ◽  
M. Sharada Varalakshmi ◽  
B. Pavan Gowtham ◽  
Y. Hari Chandana ◽  
PESN. Krishna Prasad

A molecule called hemoglobin is found in red blood cells that holds oxygen all over the body. Hemoglobin is elastic, round, and stable in a healthy human. This makes it possible to float across red blood cells. But the composition of hemoglobin is unhealthy if you have sickle cell disease. It refers to compact and bent red blood cells. The odd cells obstruct the flow of blood. It is dangerous and can result in severe discomfort, organ damage, heart strokes, and other symptoms. The human life expectancy can be shortened as well. The early identification of sickle calls will help people recognize signs that can assist antibiotics, supplements, blood transfusion, pain-relieving medications, and treatments etc. The manual assessment, diagnosis, and cell count are time consuming process and may result in misclassification and count since millions of red blood cells are in one spell. When utilizing data mining techniques such as the multilayer perceptron classifier algorithm, sickle cells can be effectively detected with high precision in the human body. The proposed approach tackles the limitations of manual research by implementing a powerful and efficient MLP (Multi-Layer Perceptron) classification algorithm that distinguishes Sickle Cell Anemia (SCA) into three classes: Normal (N), Sickle Cells(S) and Thalassemia (T) in red blood cells. This paper also presents the precision degree of the MLP classifier algorithm with other popular mining and machine learning algorithms on the dataset obtained from the Thalassemia and Sickle Cell Society (TSCS) located in Rajendra Nagar, Hyderabad, Telangana, India. Doi: 10.28991/esj-2021-01270 Full Text: PDF


Anemia ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erwin Weiss ◽  
David Charles Rees ◽  
John Stanley Gibson

Phosphatidylserine exposure occurs in red blood cells (RBCs) from sickle cell disease (SCD) patients and is increased by deoxygenation. The mechanisms responsible remain unclear. RBCs from SCD patients also have elevated cation permeability, and, in particular, a deoxygenation-induced cation conductance which mediates entry, providing an obvious link with phosphatidylserine exposure. The role of was investigated using FITC-labelled annexin. Results confirmed high phosphatidylserine exposure in RBCs from SCD patients increasing upon deoxygenation. When deoxygenated, phosphatidylserine exposure was further elevated as extracellular [] was increased. This effect was inhibited by dipyridamole, intracellular chelation, and Gardos channel inhibition. Phosphatidylserine exposure was reduced in high saline. levels required to elicit phosphatidylserine exposure were in the low micromolar range. Findings are consistent with entry through the deoxygenation-induced pathway (), activating the Gardos channel. [] required for phosphatidylserine scrambling are in the range achievablein vivo.


2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (09) ◽  
Author(s):  
Endris Muhammed ◽  
James Cooper ◽  
Daniel Devito ◽  
Robert Mushi ◽  
Maria del Pilar Aguinaga ◽  
...  

PEDIATRICS ◽  
1971 ◽  
Vol 48 (3) ◽  
pp. 457-458
Author(s):  
Annemarie Sommer ◽  
Stella B. Kontras

The incidence of splenomegaly in sickle cell anemia (defined as a spleen easily palpated below the costal margin in quiet respiration) appears to be around 10% after 10 years of age. Persistent splenomegaly in older children is rare and frequently is associated with hypersplenism. Splenectomy has been the treatment of choice in several reported cases based on red cell survival studies before and after splenectomy.1-3 Removal of the spleen has been found to be associated with marked improvement of previously very shortened red cell survival. We want to report the case of a 12-year-old boy with sickle cell anemia, splenomegaly, and sickle cell heart disease who was treated by radiation therapy for his enlarged spleen because of hypersplenism.


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