Literature DB >> 20015879

Cryohydrocytosis: increased activity of cation carriers in red cells from a patient with a band 3 mutation.

Anna Bogdanova1, Jeroen S Goede, Erwin Weiss, Nikolay Bogdanov, Poul Bennekou, Ingolf Bernhardt, Hans U Lutz.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Cryohydrocytosis is an inherited dominant hemolytic anemia characterized by mutations in a transmembrane segment of the anion exchanger (band 3 protein). Transfection experiments performed in Xenopus oocytes suggested that these mutations may convert the anion exchanger into a non-selective cation channel. The present study was performed to characterize so far unexplored ion transport pathways that may render erythrocytes of a single cryohydrocytosis patient cation-leaky. DESIGN AND METHODS: Cold-induced changes in cell volume were monitored using ektacytometry and density gradient centrifugation. Kinetics, temperature and inhibitor-dependence of the cation and water movements in the cryohydrocytosis patient's erythrocytes were studied using radioactive tracers and flame photometry. Response of the membrane potential of the patient's erythrocyte membrane to the presence of ionophores and blockers of anion and cation channels was assessed.
RESULTS: In the cold, the cryohydrocytosis patient's erythrocytes swelled in KCl-containing, but not in NaCl-containing or KNO(3)-containing media indicating that volume changes were mediated by an anion-coupled cation transporter. In NaCl-containing medium the net HOE-642-sensitive Na(+)/K(+) exchange prevailed, whereas in KCl-containing medium swelling was mediated by a chloride-dependent K(+) uptake. Unidirectional K(+) influx measurements showed that the patient's cells have abnormally high activities of the cation-proton exchanger and the K(+),Cl(-) co-transporter, which can account for the observed net movements of cations. Finally, neither chloride nor cation conductance in the patient's erythrocytes differed from that of healthy donors. Conclusions These results suggest that cross-talk between the mutated band 3 and other transporters might increase the cation permeability in cryohydrocytosis.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 20015879      PMCID: PMC2817020          DOI: 10.3324/haematol.2009.010215

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Haematologica        ISSN: 0390-6078            Impact factor:   9.941


  45 in total

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Authors:  P S Low; D Zhang; J T Bolin
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9.  Splenectomy prolongs in vivo survival of erythrocytes differently in spectrin/ankyrin- and band 3-deficient hereditary spherocytosis.

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3.  Loss-of-function and gain-of-function phenotypes of stomatocytosis mutant RhAG F65S.

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5.  Band 3 missense mutations and stomatocytosis: insight into the molecular mechanism responsible for monovalent cation leak.

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Review 6.  The Molecular Basis for Altered Cation Permeability in Hereditary Stomatocytic Human Red Blood Cells.

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Review 8.  Cell physiology and molecular mechanism of anion transport by erythrocyte band 3/AE1.

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9.  Identification of the Ca²⁺ entry pathway involved in deoxygenation-induced phosphatidylserine exposure in red blood cells from patients with sickle cell disease.

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  9 in total

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