| Literature DB >> 30890334 |
Fulin Xing1, Shuang Xun1, Yanhan Zhu1, Fen Hu1, Irena Drevenšek-Olenik2, Xinzheng Zhang1, Leiting Pan3, Jingjun Xu4.
Abstract
Extreme deformability of human erythrocytes is a prerequisite for their ability to squeeze through narrow capillaries of the blood microcirculation system. Various drugs can modify this deformability and consequently provoke circulation problems. We demonstrate that microfluidic assemblies are very convenient platforms for in vitro study of the associated processes. Two types of microfluidic channels were designed to quantitatively investigate modifications of erythrocyte deformability induced by hydrogen peroxide, ethanol and pentoxifylline based on transit velocity measurements. With a high sensitivity our microfluidic assemblies show that hydrogen peroxide decreases erythrocyte deformability in a dose-dependent manner. Then, results on ethanol resolve a biphasic nature of this reactant on the deformability of single erythrocyte cells. Results on pentoxifylline provide evidence that, similar to ethanol, also this medical drug has a double-sided effect on the erythrocyte deformability, i.e. increasing the deformability at low concentrations, while decreasing it at higher ones. Taken together, our microfluidic designs propose a potent measurement method for the erythrocyte deformability, as well as providing a perspective to evaluate effects of drugs on it.Entities:
Keywords: Deformability; Ethanol; Human erythrocytes; Hydrogen peroxide; Microfluidics; Pentoxifylline
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30890334 DOI: 10.1016/j.bbrc.2019.03.066
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem Biophys Res Commun ISSN: 0006-291X Impact factor: 3.575