The conductance of red blood cells from sickle cell patients: ion selectivity and inhibitors

The abnormally high cation permeability in red blood cells (RBCs) from patients with sickle cell disease (SCD) occupies a central role in pathogenesis. Sickle RBC properties are notably heterogeneous, however, thus limiting conventional flux techniques that necessarily average out the behaviour of m...

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Main Authors: Ma, Y-L, Rees, DC, Gibson, JS, Ellory, JC
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2012
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author Ma, Y-L
Rees, DC
Gibson, JS
Ellory, JC
author_facet Ma, Y-L
Rees, DC
Gibson, JS
Ellory, JC
author_sort Ma, Y-L
collection OXFORD
description The abnormally high cation permeability in red blood cells (RBCs) from patients with sickle cell disease (SCD) occupies a central role in pathogenesis. Sickle RBC properties are notably heterogeneous, however, thus limiting conventional flux techniques that necessarily average out the behaviour of millions of cells. Here we use the whole-cell patch configuration to characterise the permeability of single RBCs from patients with SCD in more detail. A non-specific cation conductance was reversibly induced upon deoxygenation and was permeable to both univalent (Na+, K+, Rb+) and also divalent (Ca2+, Mg2+) cations. It was sensitive to the tarantula spider toxin GsMTx-4. Mn2+ caused partial, reversible inhibition. The aromatic aldehyde o-vanillin also irreversibly inhibited the deoxygenation-induced conductance, partially at 1mM and almost completely at 5mM. Nifedipine, amiloride and ethylisopropylamiloride were ineffective. In oxygenated RBCs, the current was pH sensitive showing a marked increase as pH fell from 7.4 to 6, with no change apparent when pH was raised from 7.4 to 8. The effects of acidification and deoxygenation together were not additive. Many features of this deoxygenation-induced conductance (non-specificity for cations, permeability toCa2+ andMg2+, pH sensitivity, reversibility, partial inhibition by DIDS and Mn2+) are shared with the flux pathway sometimes referred to as Psickle. Sensitivity to GsMTx-4 indicates its possible identity as a stretch-activated channel. Sensitivity to o-vanillin implies that activation requires HbS polymerisation but since the conductance was observed in whole-cell patches, results suggest that bulk intracellular Hb is not involved; rather a membrane-bound subfraction is responsible for channel activation. The ability to record P(sickle)-like activity in single RBCs will facilitate further studies and eventual molecular identification of the pathway involved.
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spelling oxford-uuid:61c8f8cb-246d-40a0-a525-70f5e9c7efff2022-03-26T18:02:12ZThe conductance of red blood cells from sickle cell patients: ion selectivity and inhibitorsJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:61c8f8cb-246d-40a0-a525-70f5e9c7efffEnglishSymplectic ElementsWiley2012Ma, Y-LRees, DCGibson, JSEllory, JCThe abnormally high cation permeability in red blood cells (RBCs) from patients with sickle cell disease (SCD) occupies a central role in pathogenesis. Sickle RBC properties are notably heterogeneous, however, thus limiting conventional flux techniques that necessarily average out the behaviour of millions of cells. Here we use the whole-cell patch configuration to characterise the permeability of single RBCs from patients with SCD in more detail. A non-specific cation conductance was reversibly induced upon deoxygenation and was permeable to both univalent (Na+, K+, Rb+) and also divalent (Ca2+, Mg2+) cations. It was sensitive to the tarantula spider toxin GsMTx-4. Mn2+ caused partial, reversible inhibition. The aromatic aldehyde o-vanillin also irreversibly inhibited the deoxygenation-induced conductance, partially at 1mM and almost completely at 5mM. Nifedipine, amiloride and ethylisopropylamiloride were ineffective. In oxygenated RBCs, the current was pH sensitive showing a marked increase as pH fell from 7.4 to 6, with no change apparent when pH was raised from 7.4 to 8. The effects of acidification and deoxygenation together were not additive. Many features of this deoxygenation-induced conductance (non-specificity for cations, permeability toCa2+ andMg2+, pH sensitivity, reversibility, partial inhibition by DIDS and Mn2+) are shared with the flux pathway sometimes referred to as Psickle. Sensitivity to GsMTx-4 indicates its possible identity as a stretch-activated channel. Sensitivity to o-vanillin implies that activation requires HbS polymerisation but since the conductance was observed in whole-cell patches, results suggest that bulk intracellular Hb is not involved; rather a membrane-bound subfraction is responsible for channel activation. The ability to record P(sickle)-like activity in single RBCs will facilitate further studies and eventual molecular identification of the pathway involved.
spellingShingle Ma, Y-L
Rees, DC
Gibson, JS
Ellory, JC
The conductance of red blood cells from sickle cell patients: ion selectivity and inhibitors
title The conductance of red blood cells from sickle cell patients: ion selectivity and inhibitors
title_full The conductance of red blood cells from sickle cell patients: ion selectivity and inhibitors
title_fullStr The conductance of red blood cells from sickle cell patients: ion selectivity and inhibitors
title_full_unstemmed The conductance of red blood cells from sickle cell patients: ion selectivity and inhibitors
title_short The conductance of red blood cells from sickle cell patients: ion selectivity and inhibitors
title_sort conductance of red blood cells from sickle cell patients ion selectivity and inhibitors
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