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Mechanism of human erythrocyte hemolysis induced by short-chain phosphatidylcholines and lysophosphatidylcholine
Authors:Y Tanaka  K Mashino  K Inoue  S Nojima
Abstract:The incorporation and accumulation of a certain amount of short-chain phosphatidylcholine or lysophosphatidylcholine into lipid bilayers of erythrocyte membranes is the first step causing membrane perturbation in the process of hemolysis. Accumulation of dilauroylglycerophosphocholine into membranes makes human erythrocytes "permeable cells"; Ions such as Na+ or K+ can permeate through the membrane, though large molecules such as hemoglobin can not. The "pore" formation was partially reproduced in liposomes prepared from lipids extracted from human erythrocyte membranes; C12:0PC induced the release of glucose from liposomes but did not significantly induce the release of dextran. It was suggested that the phase boundary between dilauroylglycerophosphocholine and the host membrane bilayer or dilauroylglycerophosphocholine rich domain itself behaves as "pores." Erythrocytes could expand to 1.5 times the original cell volume without any appreciable hemolysis when incubated with C12:0PC at 37 degrees C. The capacity of the erythrocytes to expand was temperature dependent. The capacity may play an important role in the resistance of the cells against lysis. The "permeable cell" stage could be hardly observed when erythrocytes were treated with didecanoylglycerophosphocholine and lysophosphatidylcholine. Perturbation induced by accumulation of didecanoylglycerophosphocholine or lysophosphatidylcholine may cause non specific destruction of membranes rather than formation of a kind of "pore."
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