scholarly journals Parabiosis Incompletely Reverses Aging-Induced Metabolic Changes and Oxidant Stress in Mouse Red Blood Cells

Nutrients ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (6) ◽  
pp. 1337 ◽  
Author(s):  
Evan J. Morrison ◽  
Devin P. Champagne ◽  
Monika Dzieciatkowska ◽  
Travis Nemkov ◽  
James C. Zimring ◽  
...  

Mature red blood cells (RBCs) not only account for ~83% of the total host cells in the human body, but they are also exposed to all body tissues during their circulation in the bloodstream. In addition, RBCs are devoid of de novo protein synthesis capacity and, as such, they represent a perfect model to investigate system-wide alterations of cellular metabolism in the context of aging and age-related oxidant stress without the confounding factor of gene expression. In the present study, we employed ultra-high-pressure liquid chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry (UHPLC–MS)-based metabolomics and proteomics to investigate RBC metabolism across age in male mice (6, 15, and 25 months old). We report that RBCs from aging mice face a progressive decline in the capacity to cope with oxidant stress through the glutathione/NADPH-dependent antioxidant systems. Oxidant stress to tryptophan and purines was accompanied by declines in late glycolysis and methyl-group donors, a potential compensatory mechanism to repair oxidatively damaged proteins. Moreover, heterochronic parabiosis experiments demonstrated that the young environment only partially rescued the alterations in one-carbon metabolism in old mice, although it had minimal to no impact on glutathione homeostasis, the pentose phosphate pathway, and oxidation of purines and tryptophan, which were instead aggravated in old heterochronic parabionts.

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ratnasekhar Ch ◽  
Guillaume Rey ◽  
Sandipan Ray ◽  
Pawan K. Jha ◽  
Paul C. Driscoll ◽  
...  

AbstractCircadian clocks coordinate mammalian behavior and physiology enabling organisms to anticipate 24-hour cycles. Transcription-translation feedback loops are thought to drive these clocks in most of mammalian cells. However, red blood cells (RBCs), which do not contain a nucleus, and cannot perform transcription or translation, nonetheless exhibit circadian redox rhythms. Here we show human RBCs display circadian regulation of glucose metabolism, which is required to sustain daily redox oscillations. We found daily rhythms of metabolite levels and flux through glycolysis and the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP). We show that inhibition of critical enzymes in either pathway abolished 24-hour rhythms in metabolic flux and redox oscillations, and determined that metabolic oscillations are necessary for redox rhythmicity. Furthermore, metabolic flux rhythms also occur in nucleated cells, and persist when the core transcriptional circadian clockwork is absent in Bmal1 knockouts. Thus, we propose that rhythmic glucose metabolism is an integral process in circadian rhythms.


Transfusion ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 60 (6) ◽  
pp. 1183-1196 ◽  
Author(s):  
Angelo D'Alessandro ◽  
Xiaoyun Fu ◽  
Julie A. Reisz ◽  
Mars Stone ◽  
Steve Kleinman ◽  
...  

Anemia ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samuel Antwi-Baffour ◽  
Jonathan Kofi Adjei ◽  
Peter Owadee Forson ◽  
Stephen Akakpo ◽  
Ransford Kyeremeh ◽  
...  

Background. Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) converts glucose-6-phosphate into 6-phosphogluconate in the pentose phosphate pathway and protects red blood cells (RBCs) from oxidative damage. Their deficiency therefore makes RBCs prone to haemolysis. Sickle cell disease (SCD) on the other hand is a hereditary blood disorder in which there is a single nucleotide substitution in the codon for amino acid 6 substituting glutamic acid with valine. SCD patients are prone to haemolysis due to the shape of their red blood cells and if they are deficient in G6PD, the haemolysis may escalate. Reported studies have indicated variations in the prevalence of G6PD deficiency in SCD patients and as such further work is required. The aim of this study was therefore to estimate the incidence of G-6-PD deficiency among SCD patients and to determine its impact on their RBC parameters as a measure of incidence of anaemia.Methods. A total of 120 clinically diagnosed SCD patients of genotypes HbSS and HbSC were recruited into the study. About 5ml of blood was collected via venipuncture from each patient and used to run G6PD, full blood count, and haemoglobin (Hb) electrophoresis tests. The data were analyzed using SPSS version 20 and Graphpad prism.Result. G6PD deficiency was detected in 43 (35.83%) of the participants made up of 16 (13.33%) males and 27 (22.50%) females of whom 17 (14.17%) had partial deficiency and 10 (8.33%) full deficiency. Statiscally significant differences p=0.036 and p=0.038 were established between the Hb concentration of the participants having a G6PD deficiency and those with normal G6PD activity for males and females, respectively.Conclusion. From the results obtained, it implies that G6PD deficiency may increase the severity of anaemia in SCD patients. There is therefore the need to screen all SCD patients for G6PD deficiency to ensure that their condition is not exacerbated during treatment.


Micromachines ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 132 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gwo-Chin Ma ◽  
Wen-Hsiang Lin ◽  
Chung-Er Huang ◽  
Ting-Yu Chang ◽  
Jia-Yun Liu ◽  
...  

Circulating fetal cells (CFCs) in maternal blood are rare but have a strong potential to be the target for noninvasive prenatal diagnosis (NIPD). “Cell RevealTM system” is a silicon-based microfluidic platform capable to capture rare cell populations in human circulation. The platform is recently optimized to enhance the capture efficiency and system automation. In this study, spiking tests of SK-BR-3 breast cancer cells were used for the evaluation of capture efficiency. Then, peripheral bloods from 14 pregnant women whose fetuses have evidenced non-maternal genomic markers (e.g., de novo pathogenic copy number changes) were tested for the capture of circulating fetal nucleated red blood cells (fnRBCs). Captured cells were subjected to fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) on chip or recovered by an automated cell picker for molecular genetic analyses. The capture rate for the spiking tests is estimated as 88.1%. For the prenatal study, 2–71 fnRBCs were successfully captured from 2 mL of maternal blood in all pregnant women. The captured fnRBCs were verified to be from fetal origin. Our results demonstrated that the Cell RevealTM system has a high capture efficiency and can be used for fnRBC capture that is feasible for the genetic diagnosis of fetuses without invasive procedures.


2010 ◽  
Vol 110 (4) ◽  
pp. 882-892 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ana Zuleima Obando-Martinez ◽  
Hernando Curtidor ◽  
Magnolia Vanegas ◽  
Gabriela Arévalo-Pinzón ◽  
Manuel Alfonso Patarroyo ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heungwon Park ◽  
Shuqiang Huang ◽  
Katelyn A. Walzer ◽  
Lingchong You ◽  
Jen-Tsan Ashley Chi ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTMalarial fever arises from the synchronous bursting of human red blood cells by the Plasmodium parasite. The released parasites re-infect neighboring red blood cells and undergo another asexual cycle of differentiation and proliferation for 48 hours, before again bursting synchronously. The synchrony of bursting is lost during in vitro culturing of the parasite outside the human body, presumably because the asexual cycle is no longer entrained by host-specific circadian cues. Therefore, most in vitro malaria studies have relied on the artificial synchronization of the parasite population. However, much remains unknown about the degree of timing heterogeneity of asexual cycles and how artificial synchronization may affect this timing. Here, we combined time-lapse fluorescence microscopy and long-term culturing to follow single cells and directly measure the heterogeneous timing of in vitro asexual cycles. We first demonstrate that unsynchronized laboratory cultures are not fully asynchronous and the parasites exhibit a bimodal distribution in their first burst times. We then show that synchronized and unsynchronized cultures had similar asexual cycle periods, which indicates that artificial synchronization does not fundamentally perturb asexual cycle dynamics. Last, we demonstrate that sibling parasites descended from the same schizont exhibited significant variation in asexual cycle period, although smaller than the variation between non-siblings. The additional variance between non-siblings likely arises from the variable environments and/or developmental programs experienced in different host cells.


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 152-152
Author(s):  
Marlies P. Rossmann ◽  
Karen Hoi ◽  
Victoria Chan ◽  
Julie R. Perlin ◽  
Elliott J. Hagedorn ◽  
...  

Understanding the cell-autonomous as well as niche contributions governing erythropoiesis is critical for directed differentiation approaches of hematopoietic stem cells into differentiated red blood cells (RBCs) to treat blood disorders such as anemias and leukemias. Transcriptional intermediary factor 1 gamma (TIF1γ) is essential for erythropoiesis from zebrafish to mammals. Zebrafish moonshine mutant embryos defective for tif1γ do not make red blood cells (RBCs) due to a transcription elongation block characterized by aberrantly paused RNA polymerase II. Loss of factors involved in transcription elongation control, PAF1 and spt5, rescues the moonshine RBC defect. To elucidate the TIF1γ-mediated mechanisms in erythroid differentiation, we have performed a high-content chemical suppressor screen in the bloodless moonshine mutant using 3,500 compounds. Among the suppressors, we identified leflunomide, an inhibitor of dihydroorotate dehydrogenase (DHODH), an essential enzyme for de novo pyrimidine synthesis. Leflunomide as well as the structurally unrelated DHODH inhibitor brequinar both rescue the formation of primitive erythroid cells in 61% (38/62) and 68% (50/74) of moonshine embryos, respectively. Blastula transplant experiments revealed that tif1γ, in addition to its cell-autonomous role, plays a role in the hematopoietic niche for RBC development. Through in-vivo metabolomics analyses we have identified nucleotide metabolism as the most significantly altered process in moonshine mutants, including elevated levels of uridine monophosphate and low levels of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+). Low NAD+ levels are accompanied by a reduced oxygen consumption rate in tif1γ-depleted embryos by Seahorse analysis. In support, genome-wide transcriptome analysis coupled with chromatin immunoprecipitation studies revealed genes encoding coenzyme Q (CoQ) metabolic enzymes as direct TIF1γ targets. DHODH is the only enzyme of the pyrimidine de novo synthesis pathway located on the inner mitochondrial membrane and its activity is coupled to that of the electron transport chain (ETC). Rotenone, a potent ETC complex I inhibitor reverses the rescue of the blood defect by DHODH inhibition in moonshine embryos. Since DHODH function is linked to mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation via CoQ activity, we asked whether alterations in mitochondrial metabolism might be causal for the RBC defect in moonshine mutants. Indeed, treatment with the CoQ analog decylubiquinone results in rescue of βe3 globin expression in 26% (33/126) of moonshine embryos. These results demonstrate a tight coordination of nucleotide and mitochondrial metabolism as a key function of tif1γ-dependent transcription and reveal that TIF1γ activity regulates a metabolic program that drives cell fate decisions in the early blood lineage. Our work highlights the importance of the plasticity achieved by transcription regulatory processes such as transcription elongation for metabolic processes during lineage differentiation and could have therapeutic potential for blood diseases and consequences for erythroid differentiation protocols. Disclosures Zon: Fate Therapeutics: Equity Ownership; Scholar Rock: Equity Ownership; CAMP4: Equity Ownership.


Blood ◽  
1981 ◽  
Vol 58 (2) ◽  
pp. 341-349
Author(s):  
EM Alderman ◽  
HH Fudenberg ◽  
RE Lovins

Autologous membrane-bound IgG was isolated from a subpopulation of human red blood cells (RBC) with specific density greater than 1.110, by affinity chromatography of purified RBC membrane glycoprotein preparations using immobilized wheat germ agglutinin and immobilized anti-human immunoglobulin (Ig) as immunoabsorbents. The Ig-containing population thus obtained, when further separated by chromatography on Sephadex G-200 in the presence of chaotropic agents, yielded four peaks (Ia, Ib, II, and III). Double immunodiffusion revealed the presence of Ig in the first three peaks (IgM in peak Ia, IgA in Ib, and IgG in II) but not in peak III. Peak III was precipitated by the Ig-containing peaks (Ia, Ib, and II) in immunodiffusion assays, suggesting that the antigenic membrane determinants responsible for the binding of autologous Ig to senescent human RBC were contained in this peak (III). Peaks Ia, Ib and II precipitate purified asialoglycophorin; peak III was reactive with purified autoantibodies directed against asialoglycophorin. These results suggest that an age-related antigenic determinant(s) present on senescent human RBC is exposed by desialylation of the major sialoglycoprotein component of the RBC membrane.


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