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Role of the interaction between puerarin and the erythrocyte membrane in puerarin-induced hemolysis
Authors:Hou Shao-Zhen  Su Zi-Ren  Chen Shu-Xian  Ye Mu-Rong  Huang Song  Liu Liang  Zhou Hua  Lai Xiao-Ping
Institution:aSchool of Chinese Pharmaceutical Science, Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine, University Town, Guangzhou 510006, China;bThird Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat-Sen University, Guangzhou, China;cCentre for Cancer and Inflammation Research, School of Chinese Medicine, Hong Kong Baptist University, 7 Baptist University Road, Kowloon, Hong Kong, China
Abstract:Adverse drug reactions (ADR), especially intravenous hemolysis, have largely limited the application of puerarin injections in clinics. This study investigated the underlying mechanisms of puerarin-induced hemolysis. Our results show that puerarin induced concentration-dependent and time-dependent hemolysis when human erythrocytes were incubated in saline solution with more than 2 mM puerarin for over 2 h. However, incubation in PBS or addition of 1 mM of lidocaine to the saline solution completely abolished the hemolysis. Providing materials that could start ATP synthesis did not reverse the hemolysis, and puerarin did not affect Na+–K+–ATPase activity. In addition, puerarin (0.1–2 mM) did not cause calcium influx or exhibited pro-oxidant activity in erythrocytes. Puerarin exhibited different influences on the membrane microviscosity of erythrocytes in saline and PBS. Moreover, 1 mM lidocaine inhibited 8 mM puerarin-induced reduction of membrane microviscosity in saline solution. SDS–PAGE analysis of membrane proteins revealed that 2 mM puerarin treatment induced the appearance of several new protein bands but attenuated the expression of protein bands 2.1, 3, 4.1, 4.2 and 5. These results suggest that high concentrations of puerarin-induced hemolysis were associated with the changes of membrane lipids and of the composition of erythrocytes membrane proteins but not with ATP depletion, pro-oxidation and calcium influx. These changes could be related to the intercalation of amphiphilic puerarin at high concentration into the erythrocyte membrane in certain media, resulting in membrane disorganization and, eventually, cytolysis. Hence, in clinics, determining the optimal dose of puerarin is critical to avoid overdosing and ADR.
Keywords:Puerarin injection  Erythrocyte  Hemolysis  Membrane structure
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