scholarly journals Lysophosphatidic Acid-Activated Calcium Signaling Is Elevated in Red Cells from Sickle Cell Disease Patients

Cells ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 456
Author(s):  
Jue Wang ◽  
Laura Hertz ◽  
Sandra Ruppenthal ◽  
Wassim El Nemer ◽  
Philippe Connes ◽  
...  

(1) Background: It is known that sickle cells contain a higher amount of Ca2+ compared to healthy red blood cells (RBCs). The increased Ca2+ is associated with the most severe symptom of sickle cell disease (SCD), the vaso-occlusive crisis (VOC). The Ca2+ entry pathway received the name of Psickle but its molecular identity remains only partly resolved. We aimed to map the involved Ca2+ signaling to provide putative pharmacological targets for treatment. (2) Methods: The main technique applied was Ca2+ imaging of RBCs from healthy donors, SCD patients and a number of transgenic mouse models in comparison to wild-type mice. Life-cell Ca2+ imaging was applied to monitor responses to pharmacological targeting of the elements of signaling cascades. Infection as a trigger of VOC was imitated by stimulation of RBCs with lysophosphatidic acid (LPA). These measurements were complemented with biochemical assays. (3) Results: Ca2+ entry into SCD RBCs in response to LPA stimulation exceeded that of healthy donors. LPA receptor 4 levels were increased in SCD RBCs. Their activation was followed by the activation of Gi protein, which in turn triggered opening of TRPC6 and CaV2.1 channels via a protein kinase Cα and a MAP kinase pathway, respectively. (4) Conclusions: We found a new Ca2+ signaling cascade that is increased in SCD patients and identified new pharmacological targets that might be promising in addressing the most severe symptom of SCD, the VOC.

Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 3589-3589
Author(s):  
Natarajan V. Bhanu ◽  
Patricia Oneal ◽  
Nicole Gantt ◽  
Sung-Ho Goh ◽  
Wulin Aerbajinai ◽  
...  

Abstract The highly variable levels of fetal hemoglobin (HbF) reactivation among patients with sickle cell disease is not well understood. We previously determined that pancellular reversal of gamma-globin gene silencing is achievable through the activation of specific signal transduction pathways using stem cell factor (SCF) and transforming growth factor beta (TGF-B). Based upon the reliability of this culture assay for HbF reactivation, the culture system is additionally being utilized to screen for inhibitors of HbF reactivation. As an initial screening strategy, published reports, high-throughput sequencing efforts, and array-based transcription profiles were examined to identify erythroblast-expressed receptors with known ligands that may serve a signaling role in the regulation of globin expression. A dose-escalation strategy was used to screen seventeen ligands that bind to a subset of G-protein coupled receptors (GPCR). Among those ligands, oleoyl-lysophosphatidic acid (OLPA) and neurokinin A (NKA) were identified as potential inhibitors of HbF reactivation. Lysophosphatidic acid is a lipid metabolite that is released after tissue injury and may play a role in vascular remodeling. Neurokinin A is a small neuropeptide mainly involved in pain signaling. OLPA inhibited HbF reactivation in a dose-dependent manner (HbF/HbF+HbA ratios: EPO: 0.7±0.01%; EPO+SCF+TGF-B (EST): 36.3±0.1%; EST+10nM OLPA: 36.5±0.1%; EST+100nM OLPA: 31.6±0.1%; EST+1uM OLPA: 12.7±0.1%, p=1.9E-03). NKA also inhibited HbF reactivation, but the magnitude of the NKA effect was donor-specific. Cells from one donor demonstrated a robust response (HbF/HbF+HbA ratios: EPO: 1.7%; EST: 26.7%; EST+10nM NKA: 24.5%; EST+100nM NKA: 8.8%; EST+1uM NKA: 7.8%). Since OLPA and NKA may both act through adenylate cyclase, the role of this enzyme was examined further using the activator, forskolin (0.8 uM-20uM) and inhibitor, SQ22536 (40uM – 600uM). While we were unable to demonstrate a significant increase in HbF among cultures grown in forskolin, the addition of SQ22536 resulted in a profound, dose-dependent inhibitory effect on the expression of HbF (EPO: 1.3±1.2%; EST: 36.7±11.3%; EST+40uM SQ: 30.3±10.2%; EST+200 uM SQ : 14.5±4.5%, p=1.9E-02; EST+600uM SQ: 2.3±2.7%, p=4.1E-03). Flow cytometry revealed that the inhibitory effects of SQ22536 on HbF were pancellular. Importantly, inhibition of the main downstream target of adenylate cyclase (protein kinase A) with H89 (10nM-1.0 uM) did not result in a significant reduction in HbF. However, phosphorylation studies demonstrated that SQ22536 altered the kinetics of MEK activation. MEK is a kinase that helps mediate the HbF-activating effect of SCF [Blood 2004, 1;103(5):1929–33]. These data suggest that inhibitory effects upon HbF reactivation in adult erythroblasts can be mediated by endogenous signaling molecules. Based upon these results, we propose that patient-specific responses to tissue injury and pain may play a negative role in HbF reactivation in sickle-cell disease.


Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 1068-1068
Author(s):  
Laxminath Tumburu ◽  
Shohini Ghosh-Choudhary ◽  
Emilia Alina Barbu ◽  
Simon Yang ◽  
Lauren D Harrison Ware ◽  
...  

Abstract Sickle cell disease (SCD) is an inherited hemoglobinopathy characterized by hemolysis and intermittent acute pain with multi-organ damage. Previously, we showed that acute pain in SCD was associated with >10-fold increases in cell-free DNA (cfDNA) when compared to steady state, that were significantly reduced during hydroxyurea therapy. Apoptosis, necrotic cell death and lysis of intact cells in the blood stream have been proposed as sources of plasma cfDNA. Here, we explored if the cfDNA increases could have a role in inflammation, a constant pathological feature of SCD. cfDNA was extracted using QIAamp MinElute ccfDNA Kit (Qiagen), from the platelet-poor plasma processed within 30 minutes from the blood drawn in EDTA tubes, and analyzed using whole genome sequencing (WGS) and targeted quantitative PCR (qPCR). SCD patients are defined as in acute pain if there is no evident cause other than SCD, for which the patient needs hospitalization, either as in- or outpatient, and is treated with parenteral narcotics. Steady state was defined as the period from at any time 8 weeks prior to or after a crisis. A cross-sectional study of 8 healthy controls and 34 SCD patients (18 steady-state; 16 crisis) mapped WGS reads showed significantly higher proportion of cell-free mitochondrial DNA (cf-mtDNA) compared to nuclear cfDNA (cf-nDNA) in SCD patients compared with healthy controls (Fig 1A: steady-state: 14 fold; crisis: 11 fold; p = 0.0001). We used targeted qPCR to quantify both cf-nDNA and cf-mtDNA in another cross-sectional cohort of 13 healthy controls and 92 patients (72 steady-state, 20 crisis) as well as 18 paired HbSS patients (steady-state and crisis) samples with 10 healthy controls. The nuclear reference genes used were GAPDH and TERT and mitochondrial genes were MT-ND1 and MT-ND6. While cf-nDNA (TERT) was significantly increased (> 3.5 fold, p = 0.0251; Fig 1B) in SCD patients compared with healthy controls only during crises, significantly higher levels of cf-mtDNA over cf-nDNA were observed in SCD patients compared with healthy volunteers in both steady-state and crises (Fig 1C: MT-ND1/GAPDH: steady-state >19 fold, crisis > 8 fold; MT-ND1/TERT: steady-state > 8 fold, crisis > 7 fold; MT-ND6/GAPDH: steady-state > 7 fold, crisis > 3 fold; MT-ND6/TERT: steady-state > 4 fold; crisis > 4 fold; p < 0.05). In the paired samples, cf-nDNA (GAPDH andTERT) was significantly increased (> 3 fold; Fig 1D-E) in crisis compared to steady-state (p < 0.05). The differential increase in cf-mtDNA (cf-mtDNA:cf-nDNA ratio) levels in these patients during crises, were significantly higher compared with healthy controls (Fig 1F: MT-ND1/GAPDH: steady-state >9 fold, crisis > 8 fold; MT-ND1/TERT: steady-state > 8 fold, crisis > 9 fold; MT-ND6/GAPDH: steady-state > 8 fold, crisis > 8 fold; MT-ND6/TERT: steady-state > 8 fold; crisis > 7 fold; p < 0.005). Using confocal microscopy and mitochondrial-specific dyes (MitoTracker Green and TMRM), we show that substantial numbers of red blood cells from SCD patients retain their mitochondria in the circulation. We next explored if the elevated cf-mtDNA in SCD could contribute to its pathophysiology, via activating neutrophils to form neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs), a recognized immunological response in inflammation. Initially, we confirmed that mtDNA can induce NETosis by treating neutrophils from healthy donors with mtDNA isolated from human platelets. mtDNA consistently induced a robust NETs response (N=8) while genomic nuclear DNA did not cause any NETosis. SCD plasma containing high levels of cf-mtDNA also caused a strong NETosis response while plasma from healthy donors did not (N=11). Cytosolic adaptor STING has a central role in sensing of cytosolic double stranded DNA. We sought to determine if the downstream STING-TBK1-IRF3 pathway is associated with the mtDNA-mediated formation of NETs. We inhibited the catalytic activity of the STING downstream effector TBK1 with BX795 prior to treating neutrophils with cf-mtDNA-containing plasma (N=5). The TBK1 inhibition consistently reduced the NETs response by at least 70% confirming that cytosolic DNA sensors are involved in promoting mtDNA-mediated formation of NETs. Our findings suggest that cf-mtDNA induces NETosis contributing to the pathological sterile inflammation in SCD patients. Continual release of these mitochondrial DAMPs in hemolysis may serve as key link between inflammation and organ damage in SCD. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 3651-3651
Author(s):  
Emilia Alina Barbu ◽  
Venina Marcela Dominical ◽  
Laurel Mendelsohn ◽  
James Nichols ◽  
Darlene Allen ◽  
...  

Abstract Polymerisation of deoxygenated-HbS in sickle cell disease (SCD) leads to alteration of the shape and function of the red blood cells (RBC), resulting in hemolytic anemia and recurrent episodes of micro-vascular occlusion, triggering a cascade of downstream events and inflammation that underlies the progressive multi-systemic organ damage. Neutrophils have a critical role in promoting sickle pathophysiology; patients with higher leukocyte count, particularly neutrophils, tend to have a higher risk for more severe manifestations as well as earlier mortality. SCD neutrophils display a specific overreactive phenotype, including increased adhesive properties and production of reactive oxygen species. Activated neutrophils can also produce extracellular traps (NETs) in response to pathogens or other inflammatory stimuli. Studies have shown that prolonged exposure of healthy neutrophils to SCD plasma leads to formation of mature string-like NETs. These strings of decondensed chromatin covered with elastase (NE) or myeloperoxidase (MPO) might contribute to SCD pathophysiology. Here, we investigated if SCD neutrophils had enhanced intrinsic potential for NETs formation (i.e. could form NETs in the absence of a stimulus). We evaluated NETosis both indirectly, in which neutrophils isolated from healthy subjects were incubated with plasma from HbSS patients and directly, in which neutrophils isolated from HbSS patients were compared with those isolated from healthy donors. 17 HbSS patients in steady-state (all on hydroxyurea) and 11 race and sex matched healthy donors were included in the direct assays; the NETosis-related events were observed over a period of 7 minutes to 4 hours. For the indirect assay, we used plasma from 19 HbSS patients (14 on hydroxyurea, 5 off hydroxyurea and/or transfused), all of whom provided samples in steady-state and acute pain crisis (paired samples); the healthy neutrophils were treated with SCD plasma for up to 7 hours. A pain crisis was defined as an episode of acute pain that has no evident cause other than SCD, resulting in hospitalization and treatment with parenteral opioids. Steady state was defined as the period from at any time 8 weeks prior to or after a crisis. Patients were excluded when they were <18 or >80 years of age, pregnant or had a history of blood transfusion in the previous 8 weeks. The IRB approved the studies under NIH protocol numbers NCT00081523 (SCD subjects) and 03-H-0015 (healthy controls and SCD subjects). The NETosis features (histone citrullination H4cit3, nuclear decondensation, DNA-NE-MPO strings) were assessed by imaging flow cytometry and fluorescence microscopy. In the indirect assays, healthy neutrophils made more string NETs when treated with the SCD plasma (from both steady state and crisis) compared to plasma from healthy donors (Figure 1A), and NETs response was further increased with plasma from acute compared to their paired steady state sample (N=19, p=0.0114) (Figure 1B). Plasma from patients on or off hydroxyurea induced comparable NETosis responses. This confirmed a higher ability for the crisis milieu to modulate NETosis. Directly, neutrophils isolated from SCD patients as compared to those from healthy controls, showed increased number of decondensed H4cit3 positive nuclei, after only 7 min of incubation in RPMI (N=7, p=0.0688). By comparison the response to high concentration (20 uM) of Hemin - a regular product of hemolysis, was similar in the SCD and the healthy neutrophils (p=0.6871) (Figure 1C). This data suggested that the SCD environment might activate neutrophils to produce NETs in the absence of a specific stimulus. Fluorescence microscopy confirmed that neutrophils isolated from the patients did produce significantly more DNA-NE strings without any stimulation compared to healthy neutrophils (N=9, p=0.0079). After Hemin treatment, NETs response in SCD neutrophils was also higher than that of the healthy controls, but not statistically significant (Figure 1D). Our data provide the first direct in vitro evidence that neutrophils in SCD are innately prone to NETosis but whether and how these might contribute to the initiation or progress of SCD vaso-occlusive crises is yet to be determined. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (Supplement_5) ◽  
Author(s):  
I Moumni ◽  
K Khalfaoui ◽  
I Safra ◽  
M Chebbi ◽  
M Barmate ◽  
...  

Abstract Sickle cell disease(SCD)is a monogenic disease, in which the severity and symptoms vary widely.The sickle cell mutation is the origin of all functional and structural alterations of red blood cell(RBC)which induces the acceleration of eryptosis and formation of Circulating blood cells microparticules(MPs)which has the consequence of acute anemia and increasing the thrombotic risks in sickle cell patients. Eryptosis is the suicidal erythrocyte death characterized by erythrocyte membrane scrambling by phosphatidylserine(PS)externalization. MPs are an extracellular vesicules released following cellular activation, stress or apoptosis. These parameters are able to modulate many biological functions, and considered as biomarkers of preventive diagnostic of SCD. This present study aims to determine the cellular biomarkers to implementation new and innovative methods of the preventive diagnosis of SCDacute complications. We propose to study the mechanisms involved in the triggering of eryptosis and to quantify microparticles derived from platelets and erythrocytes of homozygous sickle cell patients. Following clinical diagnosis, homozygous SCDpatients and healthy donors were sampled for hematological and cellular assays. The exploration of eryptosis and MPs was performed by a flow cytometry by determining the viability parameters of red blood cells. The outcome of our study indicated that Eryptosis in sickle cell patients is triggered essentially by high Ca2 + entry and narrowing of red blood cells. However, the pathway of ceramides and ERO can also considered a stimulating factor of eryptosis. Eryptosis ensures healthy erythrocyte quantity in circulation whereas excessive eryptosis is the cause of acute anemia and may contribute to vaso-occlusive crisis in SCD patients.For MPs study,microparticles derived from platelets and erythrocytes clearly increased in SCD patients. This suggests that erythrocytes MPs may contribute to thrombotic risk andchronic hemolytic anemia. Key messages Potentiel biomarkers in the preventive diagnosis of sickle cell disease. Eryptosis and plasmatic microparticules as potentiel biomarkers.


2021 ◽  
Vol 28 ◽  
Author(s):  
Himanshu Garg ◽  
Kristina J. Tatiossian ◽  
Karsten Peppel ◽  
Gregory J. Kato ◽  
Eva Herzog

: Sickle Cell Disease (SCD) is one of the most common monogenic disorders caused by a point mutation in the β-globin gene. This mutation results in polymerization of hemoglobin (Hb) under reduced oxygenation conditions, causing rigid sickle-shaped RBCs and hemolytic anemia. This clearly defined fundamental molecular mechanism makes SCD a prototypical target for precision therapy. Both the mutant β-globin protein and its downstream pathophysiology are pharmacological targets of intensive research. SCD also is a disease well-suited for biological interventions like gene therapy. Recent advances in hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) transplantation and gene therapy platforms, like Lentiviral vectors and gene editing strategies, expand the potentially curative options for patients with SCD. This review discusses the recent advances in precision therapy for SCD and the preclinical and clinical advances in autologous HSC gene therapy for SCD.


1974 ◽  
Vol 133 (4) ◽  
pp. 624-631 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. A. Bensinger

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