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1.
Abstract

The aim of the study was to examine and compare the effects of methemoglobin (metHb) and ferrylhemoglobin (ferrylHb) on the erythrocyte membrane. Kinetic studies of the decay of ferrylhemoglobin (*HbFe(IV)=O denotes ferryl derivative of hemoglobin present 5 min after initiation of the reaction of metHb with H2O2; ferrylHb) showed that autoredecay of this derivative is slower than its decay in the presence of whole erythrocytes and erythrocyte membranes. It provides evidence for interactions between ferrylHb and the erythrocyte membrane. Both hemoglobin derivatives induced small changes in the structure and function of the erythrocyte membrane which were more pronounced for ferrylHb. The amount of ferrylHb bound to erythrocyte membranes increased with incubation time and, after 2 h, was twice that of membrane-bound metHb. The incubation of erythrocytes with metHb or ferrylHb did not influence osmotic fragility and did not initiate peroxidation of membrane lipids in whole erythrocytes as well as in isolated erythrocyte membranes. Membrane acetylcholinesterase activity increased by about 10% after treatment of whole erythrocytes with both metHb and ferrylHb. ESR spectra of membrane-bound maleimide spin label demonstrated minor changes in the conformation of label-binding proteins in ferrylHb-treated erythrocyte membranes. The fluidity of the membrane surface layer decreased slightly after incubation of erythrocytes and isolated erythrocyte membranes with ferrylHb and metHb. In whole erythrocytes, these changes were not stable and disappeared during longer incubation.  相似文献   

2.
Glutathionylation of hemoglobin (Hb) was studied by incubation of intact human erythrocytes with 1 mM tert-butylhydroperoxide (tBHP). Electrophoresis of the membranes showed a time dependent increase of membrane-bound Hb alpha chain until 10 min, and immunoblotting study showed that membrane-bound Hb alpha chain reacted with anti-glutathione antibody only after 10 min. Concomitant with the Hb alpha chain, membrane associated actin, spectrin, and glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase reacted with the antibody. Cytosolic Hb of the control erythrocytes reacted with anti-glutathione antibody. Together with our previous paper, the present study indicates that at least three different types of glutathionylation of Hb can exist in erythrocytes. The first type is a mixed disulfide bond between reduced glutathione (GSH) and normal Hb. The second type is a disulfide bond between the cysteine 93 of metHb beta chain and oxidized glutathione (GSSG), and the third type is a disulfide bond between the other cysteine residues of metHb alpha chain and/or metHb beta chain and GSSG.  相似文献   

3.
The activity of NADH-methemoglobin reductase (metHb-reductase) in membranes isolated from human erythrocytes treated with phenylhydrazine at its sublytic concentration was studied. A decrease in the activity of membrane-bound metHb-reductase was shown to depend on the concentration of phenylhydrazine. Simultaneously, an increase in the level of membrane-bound methemoglobin and a change in the fluorescence parameters of membrane-bound 4,4'-diisothiocy-anatostilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid were registered. In the case when Hb-free erythrocyte ghosts were treated with 0.2-2.0 mM phenylhydrazine, the activity of metHb-reductase did not change. The obtained results indicate that the inhibition of the activity of membrane-bound metHb-reductase by phenylhydrazine-induced oxidative stress in human erythrocytes is not caused by the direct action of the oxidant on the enzyme. The reason for this is the interaction of the products of hemoglobin oxidation with erythrocyte membrane (protein band 3) and structural changes in membrane proteins.  相似文献   

4.
Preliminary experiments revealed that ferrylmyoglobin decayed more slowly in the absence than in the presence of intact erythrocytes and erythrocyte membranes. This suggested the existence of interactions between FerrylMb and the erythrocyte membrane. Subsequent studies examined the influence of FerrylMb on the membrane of intact erythrocytes and on isolated erythrocyte membranes. The incubation of intact erythrocytes with FerrylMb did not influence their osmotic fragility or the fluidity of their membranes; the level of peroxidation of the membrane lipids increased only slightly (there was only a slight increase in the level of membrane lipid peroxidation). The activity of acetylcholinesterase significantly increased after 15 minutes of incubation, whereas longer incubation did not lead to any changes in the activity of this enzyme. The incubation of isolated erythrocyte membranes with FerrylMb resulted in an increase in their fluidity and a significant rise in the level of lipid peroxidation.  相似文献   

5.
Erythrocyte damage induced by hypochlorous acid (HOCl) results in cell lysis developing with time after the oxidant is removed (post-hemolysis). The apparent rate constant of post-hemolysis depends on time of incubation in the presence of HOCl and concentration of this oxidant. HOCl-dependent damage of erythrocyte membranes is associated with uncompetitive inhibition of the membrane-bound acetylcholinesterase. Genistein-8-C-glucoside is an isoflavonoid isolated from the flowers of Lupinus luteus L.; in aqueous solution, genistein-8-C-glucoside (0.5-2 mM) efficiently inhibited HOCl-induced damage to erythrocytes similar to the known HOCl scavengers taurine and reduced glutathione. This bioflavonoid can protect the erythrocyte membrane (and to a lesser extent, intraerythrocytic components) by interacting with the reactive chlorine species including hypochlorous acid and membrane-bound chloroamines formed in the reaction of HOCl with erythrocyte membrane proteins.  相似文献   

6.
Nagababu E  Rifkind JM 《Biochemistry》2000,39(40):12503-12511
The reaction of Fe(II) hemoglobin (Hb) but not Fe(III) hemoglobin (metHb) with hydrogen peroxide results in degradation of the heme moiety. The observation that heme degradation was inhibited by compounds, which react with ferrylHb such as sodium sulfide, and peroxidase substrates (ABTS and o-dianisidine), demonstrates that ferrylHb formation is required for heme degradation. A reaction involving hydrogen peroxide and ferrylHb was demonstrated by the finding that heme degradation was inihibited by the addition of catalase which removed hydrogen peroxide even after the maximal level of ferrylHb was reached. The reaction of hydrogen peroxide with ferrylHb to produce heme degradation products was shown by electron paramagnetic resonance to involve the one-electron oxidation of hydrogen peroxide to the oxygen free radical, superoxide. The inhibition by sodium sulfide of both superoxide production and the formation of fluorescent heme degradation products links superoxide production with heme degradation. The inability to produce heme degradation products by the reaction of metHb with hydrogen peroxide was explained by the fact that hydrogen peroxide reacting with oxoferrylHb undergoes a two-electron oxidation, producing oxygen instead of superoxide. This reaction does not produce heme degradation, but is responsible for the catalytic removal of hydrogen peroxide. The rapid consumption of hydrogen peroxide as a result of the metHb formed as an intermediate during the reaction of reduced hemoglobin with hydrogen peroxide was shown to limit the extent of heme degradation.  相似文献   

7.
Boccini F  Herold S 《Biochemistry》2004,43(51):16393-16404
The strong oxidizing and nitrating agent peroxynitrite has been shown to diffuse into erythrocytes and oxidize oxyhemoglobin (oxyHb) to metHb. Because the value of the second-order rate constant for this reaction is on the order of 10(4) M(-)(1) s(-)(1) and the oxyHb concentration is about 20 mM (expressed per heme), this process is rather fast and oxyHb is considered a sink for peroxynitrite. In this work, we showed that the reaction of oxyHb with peroxynitrite, both in the presence and absence of CO(2), proceeds via the formation of oxoiron(iv)hemoglobin (ferrylHb), which in a second step is reduced to metHb and nitrate by its reaction with NO(2)(*). In the presence of physiological relevant amounts of CO(2), ferrylHb is generated by the reaction of NO(2)(*) with the coordinated superoxide of oxyHb (HbFe(III)O(2)(*)(-)). This reaction proceeds via formation of a peroxynitrato-metHb complex (HbFe(III)OONO(2)), which decomposes to generate the one-electron oxidized form of ferrylHb, the oxoiron(iv) form of hemoglobin with a radical localized on the globin. CO(3)(*)(-), the second radical formed from the reaction of peroxynitrite with CO(2), is also scavenged efficiently by oxyHb, in a reaction that finally leads to metHb production. Taken together, our results indicate that oxyHb not only scavenges peroxynitrite but also the radicals produced by its decomposition.  相似文献   

8.
Biochemical consequences of oxidation of hemoglobin (Hb) in intact human erythrocytes were studied. The incubation of washed erythrocyte with 1mM tert-butylhydroperoxide induced an increase in glutathionyl-Hb (G-Hb). The formation of G-Hb occurred linearly until 10 min in parallel with the formation of methemoglobin (metHb) after exhaustion of reduced glutathione. The results show that metHb, but not normal Hb, reacts with oxidized glutathione to form G-Hb. G-Hb was confirmed by immunoblotting with anti-glutathione antibody and the formation of G-Hb was accompanied by parallel decrease in beta-globin detected with a reversed phase HPLC. Electrophoretic studies showed time-dependent increase in membrane-associated alpha-Hb until 10 min, indicating that a part of unpaired alpha-Hb bound to the membrane. Pre-beta-globin increased despite the decrease in beta-globin and a part of the increase was independent of the decrease in beta-globin. Pre-beta-globin reacted with anti-glutathione antibody, but it differs from G-Hb in many features.  相似文献   

9.
We encapsulated a purified and concentrated hemoglobin (Hb) solution with a phospholipid bilayer membrane to form Hb vesicles (particle diameter, ca. 250 nm) for the development of artificial oxygen carriers. Reaction of Hb inside the vesicle with hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) is one of the important safety issues to be clarified and compared with a free Hb solution. During the reaction of the Hb solution with H(2)O(2), metHb (Fe(III)) and ferrylHb (Fe(IV)=O) are produced, and H(2)O(2) is decomposed by the catalase-like reaction of Hb. The aggregation of discolored Hb products due to heme degradation is accompanied by the release of iron (ferric ion). On the other hand, the concentrated Hb within the Hb vesicle reacts with H(2)O(2) that permeated through the bilayer membrane, and the same products as the Hb solution are formed inside the vesicle. However, there is no turbidity change, no particle diameter change of the Hb vesicles, and no peroxidation of lipids comprising the vesicles after the reaction with H(2)O(2). Furthermore, no free iron is detected outside the vesicle, though ferric ion is released from the denatured Hb inside the vesicle, indicating the barrier effect of the bilayer membrane against the permeation of ferric ion. When vesicles composed of egg york lecithin (EYL) as unsaturated lipids are added to the mixture of Hb and H(2)O(2), the lipid peroxidation is caused by ferrylHb and hydroxyl radical generated from reaction of the ferric iron with H(2)O(2), whereas no lipid peroxidation is observed in the case of the Hb vesicle dispersion because the saturated lipid membrane of the Hb vesicle should prevent the interaction of the ferrylHb or ferric iron with the EYL.  相似文献   

10.
The aim of our investigation was to study the red blood cell (RBC) membrane effects of NaNO(2)-induced oxidative stress. Hyperpolarization of erythrocyte membranes and an increase in membrane rigidity have been shown as a result of RBC oxidation by sodium nitrite. These membrane changes preceded reduced glutathione depletion and were observed simultaneously with methemoglobin (metHb) formation. Changes of the glutathione pool (total and reduced glutathione, and mixed protein-glutathione disulfides) during nitrite-induced erythrocyte oxidation have been demonstrated. The rates of intracellular oxyhemoglobin and GSH oxidation highly increased as pH decreased in the range of 7.5-6.5. The activation energy of intracellular metHb formation obtained from the temperature dependence of the rate of HbO(2) oxidation in RBC was equal to 16.7+/-1.6 kJ/mol in comparison with 12.8+/-1.5 kJ/mol calculated for metHb formation in hemolysates. It was found that anion exchange protein (band 3 protein) of the erythrocyte membrane does not participate significantly in the transport of nitrite ions into the erythrocytes as band 3 inhibitors (DIDS, SITS) did not decrease the intracellular HbO(2) oxidation by extracellular nitrite.  相似文献   

11.
The structural changes in erythrocytes membranes were examined before and after the second heat shock of erythrocytes. Electrophoretic separation of protein erythrocyte membranes for cells incubated at 48.5°C was different from control i.e. from erythrocytes incubated at 37°C. No quantitative or qualitative changes were spotted in comparison with protein membranes isolated from the erythrocytes following single or double heat shock. Fluidity of erythrocytes membranes was determined by using spin labels, 5-doxylstearic acid and 16-doxylstearic acid. The membranes were more rigid in their hydrophobic regions after incubation of cells at 44°C. It can be suggested that erythrocyte membranes play some role in thermotolerance and heat damage of enuclate cells.  相似文献   

12.
Glycophorin and CD4 proteins are tightly associated with intact human erythrocyte membranes after a short-time incubation at low pH (1-2 min, pH lower than 5, 37 degrees C). Flow cytometry and epifluorescence microscope observations showed that after incubation of red cells with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) labeled glycophorin at pH values lower than 5, the erythrocyte membrane and subsequently formed ghost membranes were fluorescent. Unlabeled glycophorin was reacted with mouse erythrocytes using the same low-pH conditions. Flow cytometry and fluorescence microscopy showed that anti-glycophorin monoclonal antibodies were able to recognize the epitopes of glycophorin associated with the mouse erythrocytes. Kinetic experiments showed that the interaction of FITC-glycophorin with red cell membranes can be monitored by a decrease in the fluorescence intensity. Erythrocyte associated glycophorin was not removed from the membranes after 24 h incubation in human plasma (in vitro, 39 degrees C). A glycoprotein extract containing CD4 was isolated from a T4-lymphoma cell line (CEM). This protein extract was incubated with erythrocytes using the same low-pH conditions. Fluorescently labeled monoclonal antibodies against CD4 stained the red cells after association of CD4 with the membranes. Electron microscopy showed 10 nm immunoglobulin G-coated gold beads associated with CD4-bearing erythrocyte membranes after incubation with anti-CD4 antibodies and then with the gold beads. The potential use of the CD4-erythrocyte complex as a therapeutical agent against acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) is suggested.  相似文献   

13.
《Free radical research》2013,47(8):990-1003
Abstract

Erythrocytes are continuously exposed to risk of oxidative injury due to oxidant oxygen species. To prevent damage, they have antioxidant agents namely, catalase (Cat), glutathione peroxidase (GPx), and peroxiredoxin 2 (Prx2). Our aim was to contribute to a better understanding of the interplay between Prx2, Cat, and GPx under H2O2-induced oxidative stress, by studying their changes in the red blood cell cytosol and membrane, in different conditions. These three enzymes were quantified by immunoblotting. Malondialdehyde, that is, lipoperoxidation (LPO) in the erythrocyte membrane, and membrane-bound hemoglobin (MBH) were evaluated, as markers of oxidative stress. We also studied the erythrocyte membrane protein profile, to estimate how oxidative stress affects the membrane protein structure. We showed that under increasing H2O2 concentrations, inhibition of the three enzymes with or without metHb formation lead to the binding of Prx2 and GPx (but not Cat) to the erythrocyte membrane. Prx2 was detected mainly in its oxidized form and the linkage of metHb to the membrane seems to compete with the binding of Prx2. Catalase played a major role in protecting erythrocytes from high exogenous flux of H2O2, since whenever Cat was active there were no significant changes in any of the studied parameters. When only Cat was inhibited, Prx2 and GPx were unable to prevent H2O2-induced oxidative stress resulting in increasing MBH and membrane LPO. Additionally, the inhibition of one or more of these enzymes induced changes in the anchor/linker proteins of the junctional complexes of the membrane cytoskeleton–lipid bilayer, which might lead to membrane destabilization.  相似文献   

14.
The parameters describing the structural and functional state of membranes depending on the level of reduced glutathione in erythrocytes were studied. It was shown, that the decrease in the concentration of reduced intracellular glutathione in erythrocytes upon metabolic depletion (prolonged incubation of cells at 37 degrees C in the absence of glucose) or a rapid irreversible depletion of glutathione with 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene enhances lipid peroxidation processes in membranes, inhibits the membrane-bound NAD.H methemoglobin reductase activity and decreases the intensity of 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatrien fluorescence. The data obtained suggest that the depletion of reduced intracellular glutathione causes changes in the physicochemical state of the erythrocyte membrane: the accumulation of lipid peroxidation products, changes in the physical state of lipid bilayer and the inhibition of membrane-bound NAD.H-methemoglobin reductase activity.  相似文献   

15.
Erythrocyte plasma membranes were isolated from a homogeneous population of human or rabbit erythrocytes fractionated into classes representing young, middle-age and old age in vivo. Lipid analyses of human erythrocyte plasma membranes reveal a decrease of the cholesterol to phospholipid molar ratio, followed by a marked decrease in the activities of the membrane-bound enzymes (Na+,K+)-stimulated ATPase, acetylcholinesterase and NAD+ase from young to old age. Such changes were not observed between young and middle-age rabbit erythrocytes. Incubation of rabbit young erythrocytes with phosphatidylcholine vesicles (liposomes) to obtain partial depletion of their membrane cholesterol, indicated that cholesterol depletion causes a statistically significant decrease of the (Na+,K+)-stimulated ATPase and acetylcholinesterase activities, but the NAD+ase activity remained almost unchanged. The biological significance of these data are discussed in terms of the differences and modifications in the interaction of membrane-bound enzymes with membrane lipids during in vivo ageing of erythrocytes.  相似文献   

16.
Saponin and ammonium chloride lysis have been applied for some time to the separation of erythrocyte membranes from malarial-infected erythrocytes, allowing easy isolation of the parasites. We present a reevaluation of the use of saponin and ammonium chloride as tools for isolating Plasmodium (knowlesi or falciparum) parasites. Acetylcholine esterase (EC 3.1.1.7) was used as an erythrocyte membrane marker and CDP-choline: 1,2-diacylglycerol cholinephosphotransferase (EC 2.7.8.2) as a parasite membrane marker to monitor fractionation by these agents. Both saponin and ammonium chloride produced hemolysis of uninfected and infected erythrocytes, but failed to separate host erythrocyte membrane from the parasite, regardless of its stage. Thus, saponin and ammonium chloride can be used to isolate whole infected erythrocytes, depleted of hemoglobin, by selective disruption of uninfected cells.  相似文献   

17.
Is an intact plasma membrane responsible for keeping hemoglobin and water within the human erythrocyte? If not, what is responsible? How free is Hb to move about within the erythrocyte? To answer these questions erythrocytes were taken for phase contrast microscopy, transmission electron microscopy (TEM), determination of water-holding capacity, and proton NMR studies both before and after membrane disruption with a nonionic detergent (Brij 58). Addition of 0.2% Brij to a D2O saline solution of hemoglobin (Hb) caused particles of Hb to appear and to aggregate. This aggregation of Hb caused the amplitude of the Hb proton NMR spectra to decrease. Thus, the less mobile the Hb the lower the Hb proton spectra amplitude. Erythrocytes washed in D2O saline showed proton NMR spectra of relatively low amplitude. Addition of Brij (0.2%) to these erythrocytes caused increased Hb mobility within these erythrocytes. The TEM of fixed and thin-sectioned erythrocytes treated with Brij showed disruption of the plasma membrane of all erythrocytes regardless of whether or not they had lost Hb. Brij-permeabilized erythrocytes washed in D2O saline or in a D2O K buffer maintained a higher heavy water-holding capacity upon centrifugation as compared to nonpermeabilized erythrocytes. The TEM of Brij-treated and washed erythrocyte “shells” revealed a continuous submembrane lamina but no other evidence of cytoskeletal elements. The water-holding capacity of the erythrocyte can be accounted for by the water-holding capacity of hemoglobin. The evidence favors a relatively immobile state of Hb and of water in the erythrocyte that is not immediately dependent on an intact plasma membrane but is attributed to interactions between Hb molecules and the submembrane lamina.  相似文献   

18.
Glycolytic enzymes have been observed to associate in vitro with membranes and cytoplasmic filaments in a variety of systems, but their distribution in vivo is contested. We have therefore examined the distribution of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (G3PD) in the intact human erythrocyte using indirect immunofluorescence and affinity-purified rabbit antibodies to G3PD. Antibody specificity was demonstrated by immunoblotting as well as immunofluorescence experiments with ghosts specifically depleted of and reconstituted with G3PD. Anti-G3PD immunolabeling experiments utilized both fixed whole cells and fixed cell suspensions infused with 2.3 M sucrose, frozen and thick-sectioned. In all experiments a two-step fixation protocol was employed which ensured that cytoplasmic hemoglobin was retained when cells were subjected to Triton X-100 permeabilization, the anti-genicity of G3PD was preserved, and antibody penetration was complete. We used mixtures of biotinylated affinity-purified antibodies to G3PD and dichlorotriazinylaminofluorescein-labeled, affinity-purified antibodies to hemoglobin, followed by rhodamine-streptavidin, in double-label experiments. In both whole and sectioned human erythrocytes, G3PD staining was predominantly membrane associated while hemoglobin staining was diffusely distributed throughout the cytoplasm. In isolated ghosts, some G3PD was tightly bound to the membrane and was resistant to elution with phosphate-buffered saline and NAD+/arsenate. However, in immunolabeled rat reticulocytes and erythrocytes G3PD was cytoplasmic. Nucleated human blood cells and platelets also exhibited cytoplasmic G3PD. In approximately 10% of the human erythrocyte population G3PD was also cytoplasmic. These cells were flatter in shape and exhibited strong cytoplasmic immunolabeling for hemoglobin which was sometimes concentrated along the cell membrane; possibly, these cells were late reticulocytes or early erythrocytes. We conclude that G3PD is preferentially associated with the plasma membrane of human erythrocytes in a specific fashion.  相似文献   

19.
Hemolysins are cell-damaging protein toxins produced by pathogenic bacteria, which are usually released into the extracellular medium. Escherichia coli enterohemolysin is an intracellular toxin produced during the log phase of growth, with a maximal intracellular accumulation in the late log phase. In the present study, we have employed electron microscopy and SDS-PAGE to assess the effects of enterohemolysin on erythocyte membranes from different species. The erythrocyte cell damage began immediately after exposure to enterohemolysin with chemically detectable changes in cell membrane permeability, and the formation of surface lesions which increased rapidly in size. This process resulted in complete cell destruction. Ring-shaped structures with a diameter of 10nm were observed by electron microscopy after treatment of horse erythrocyte membranes with enterohemolysin. The ring structures were found clustered and irregularly distributed on the surface of the membranes. Following incubation of the toxin with horse erythrocyte ghosts and detergent-solubilization, the enterohemolysin was isolated from the cytoplasm in its membrane-bound form by sucrose density gradient. SDS-PAGE and silver staining of deoxycholate-solubilized target membranes revealed heterogeneous forms of the toxin. By using SDS-PAGE and gel filtration, the molecular weight of the toxin was estimated to be 35 kDa. With respect to species specificity, horse erythrocytes showed the highest sensitivity to the enterohemolysin, followed by human and guinea pig erythrocytes. The hemolytic sensitivity correlated with the toxin binding capacity of erythrocyte membranes of different animal species. The degree of hemolysis was unaffected by temperature in the range of 4 degrees C-37 degrees C and was optimal at pH 9.0. In contrast to pore-forming cytolysins, the hemolytic activity of enterohemolysin was enhanced continuously in the presence of increasing concentrations of dextran 4 and dextran 8 within the range of 5 to 30 mM. Trypsin sensitivity of membrane-bound enterohemolysin indicates that the cell surface is the most likely target site for this toxin. Additionally, the fact that proteinase and phosphatase inhibitors failed to inhibit lysis suggests that enterohemolysin alters and disrupts cell membranes by a detergent-like mechanism.  相似文献   

20.
M Record  A Loyter    S Gatt 《The Biochemical journal》1980,187(1):115-121
Incubation at 37 degrees C of haemolysed chicken erythrocytes ('chicken erythrocyte ghosts') resulted in hydrolysis of the membrane sphingomyelin, suggesting an activation of a latent sphingomyelinase during the haemolysis procedure. When this incubation was continued for several hours, the entire sphingomyelin of the erythrocyte 'ghosts' was hydrolysed and membranes were obtained that were devoid of sphingomyelin, but had an active sphingomyelinase. Mixing the latter membranes with human erythrocyte 'ghosts' or positively charged liposomes led to hydrolysis of the sphingomyelin in these two membranes. This suggested that, after haemolysis, the activated sphingomyelinase in the membrane of the chicken erythrocyte 'ghosts' could hydrolyse sphingomyelin in its own membrane ('intramembrane utilization') or adjacent membranes ('intermembrane utilization').  相似文献   

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