Sensing of red blood cells with decreased membrane deformability by the human spleen

Author:

Safeukui Innocent1234,Buffet Pierre A.56,Deplaine Guillaume125,Perrot Sylvie12,Brousse Valentine7,Sauvanet Alain8,Aussilhou Beatrice8,Dokmak Safi8,Couvelard Anne9,Cazals-Hatem Dominique9,Mercereau-Puijalon Odile12,Milon Geneviève10,David Peter H.12,Mohandas Narla11

Affiliation:

1. Immunologie Moléculaire des Parasites, Département de Parasitologie Mycologie, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France;

2. Centre national de la recherche scientifique, Unité de Recherche Associée 2581, Paris, France;

3. Boler-Parseghian Center for Rare and Neglected Diseases and

4. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN;

5. INSERM–University Pierre and Marie Curie (Paris 6 University) Unités Mixtes de Recherche Scientifique 945, Paris, France;

6. Department of Parasitology, Pitié Salpétrière Hospital, Assistance Publique–Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP), Paris, France;

7. Department of Pediatrics, Necker Hospital, AP-HP, Paris, France;

8. Department of Surgery and

9. Department of Pathology, Beaujon Hospital, AP-HP, Clichy, France;

10. Immunophysiologie et Parasitisme, Département de Parasitologie Mycologie, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France; and

11. New York Blood Center, New York, NY

Abstract

Abstract The current paradigm in the pathogenesis of several hemolytic red blood cell disorders is that reduced cellular deformability is a key determinant of splenic sequestration of affected red cells. Three distinct features regulate cellular deformability: membrane deformability, surface area-to-volume ratio (cell sphericity), and cytoplasmic viscosity. By perfusing normal human spleens ex vivo, we had previously showed that red cells with increased sphericity are rapidly sequestered by the spleen. Here, we assessed the retention kinetics of red cells with decreased membrane deformability but without marked shape changes. A controlled decrease in membrane deformability (increased membrane rigidity) was induced by treating normal red cells with increasing concentrations of diamide. Following perfusion, diamide-treated red blood cells (RBCs) were rapidly retained in the spleen with a mean clearance half-time of 5.9 minutes (range, 4.0-13.0). Splenic clearance correlated positively with increased membrane rigidity (r = 0.93; P < .0001). To determine to what extent this increased retention was related to mechanical blockade in the spleen, diamide-treated red cells were filtered through microsphere layers that mimic the mechanical sensing of red cells by the spleen. Diamide-treated red cells were retained in the microsphilters (median, 7.5%; range, 0%-38.6%), although to a lesser extent compared with the spleen (median, 44.1%; range, 7.3%-64.0%; P < .0001). Taken together, these results have implications for understanding the sensitivity of the human spleen to sequester red cells with altered cellular deformability due to various cellular alterations and for explaining clinical heterogeneity of RBC membrane disorders.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Hematology

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