Author:
Russo A,Tellone E,Ficarra S,Giardina B,Bellocco E,Lagana G,Leuzzi U,Kotyk A,Galtieri A
Abstract
During vertebrate evolution, structural changes in red blood cells
(RBC) and hemoglobin (Hb), have probably resulted in the
importance of blood carbon dioxide transport. The
chloride/bicarbonate exchange across the RBC membrane, which
is an integral part of the blood CO2 transport process in
vertebrates, has been examined on two different species of
teleost fish, Euthynnus alletteratus and Thunnus thynnus, at
several oxygenation states of erythrocyte HOS (high-oxygenation
state, about 90 % of saturation) and LOS (low-oxygenation state,
about 15 % of saturation). The results were compared with those
observed in human RBC under the same experimental conditions
and with the chicken (Gallus gallus) erythrocytes, which have
particular modifications at the N-terminus of the band 3 protein
(B3). In fish the kinetic measurements have shown a different
anion transport in several oxygenation states of erythrocytes,
indicating that also at lower levels of vertebrate evolution there
exists a modulation of the anionic flow affected by oxygen. The
functional correlation of anion transport to changes of parts of
the hemoglobin sequence responsible for alterations in the
interactions with the cytoplasmic domain of band 3 protein
(cdb3) allowed us to suggest a hypothesis about fish physiology.
The highest values of kinetic measurements observed in fish
have been attributed to the metabolic need of the RBC in
response to the removal of CO2 that in teleosts is also of
endogenous origin.
Publisher
Institute of Physiology of the Czech Academy of Sciences
Subject
General Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
21 articles.
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