Microfluidic study of retention and elimination of abnormal red blood cells by human spleen with implications for sickle cell disease

Author:

Qiang Yuhao1,Sissoko Abdoulaye234,Liu Zixiang L.5,Dong Ting6,Zheng Fuyin17ORCID,Kong Fang7,Higgins John M.8ORCID,Karniadakis George E.5ORCID,Buffet Pierre A.234,Suresh Subra19ORCID,Dao Ming17ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139

2. Université Paris Cité, INSERM, Biologie Intégrée du Globule Rouge, 75015 Paris, France

3. Université des Antilles, Biologie Intégrée du Globule Rouge, 75015 Paris, France

4. Laboratoire d'Excellence du Globule Rouge, 75015 Paris, France

5. Division of Applied Mathematics, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912

6. Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139

7. School of Biological Sciences, Nanyang Technological University, 639798 Singapore, Singapore

8. Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02114

9. Nanyang Technological University, 639798 Singapore, Singapore

Abstract

The spleen clears altered red blood cells (RBCs) from circulation, contributing to the balance between RBC formation (erythropoiesis) and removal. The splenic RBC retention and elimination occur predominantly in open circulation where RBCs flow through macrophages and inter-endothelial slits (IESs). The mechanisms underlying and interconnecting these processes significantly impact clinical outcomes. In sickle cell disease (SCD), blockage of intrasplenic sickled RBCs is observed in infants splenectomized due to acute splenic sequestration crisis (ASSC). This life-threatening RBC pooling and organ swelling event is plausibly triggered or enhanced by intra-tissular hypoxia. We present an oxygen-mediated spleen-on-a-chip platform for in vitro investigations of the homeostatic balance in the spleen. To demonstrate and validate the benefits of this general microfluidic platform, we focus on SCD and study the effects of hypoxia on splenic RBC retention and elimination. We observe that RBC retention by IESs and RBC–macrophage adhesion are faster in blood samples from SCD patients than those from healthy subjects. This difference is markedly exacerbated under hypoxia. Moreover, the sickled RBCs under hypoxia show distinctly different phagocytosis processes from those non-sickled RBCs under hypoxia or normoxia. We find that reoxygenation significantly alleviates RBC retention at IESs, and leads to rapid unsickling and fragmentation of the ingested sickled RBCs inside macrophages. These results provide unique mechanistic insights into how the spleen maintains its homeostatic balance between splenic RBC retention and elimination, and shed light on how disruptions in this balance could lead to anemia, splenomegaly, and ASSC in SCD and possible clinical manifestations in other hematologic diseases.

Funder

HHS | NIH | National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

Nanyang Technological University

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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