Literature DB >> 31525342

Failure in the compensatory mechanism in red blood cells due to sustained smoking during pregnancy.

Payal Chakraborty1, Krisztina N Dugmonits1, Attila G Végh2, Réka Hollandi3, Péter Horváth3, József Maléth4, Péter Hegyi5, Gábor Németh6, Edit Hermesz7.   

Abstract

Decrease in the bioavailability of vasoactive nitric oxide (NO), derived from the endothelial nitric oxide synthase (NOS3), underlines vascular endothelial damage. Our expanding knowledge on mature red blood cells (RBCs) makes it supposable that RBCs might contribute to vascular function and integrity via their active NO synthetizing system (RBC-NOS3). This "rescue" mechanism of RBCs could be especially important during pregnancy with smoking habit, when smoking acts as an additional stressor and causes active change in the redox status. In this study RBC populations of 82 non-smoking (RBC-NS) and 75 smoking (RBC-S) pregnant women were examined. Morphological variants were followed by confocal microscopy and quantified by a microscopy based intelligent analysis software. Fluorescence activated cell sorting was used to examine the translational and posttranslational regulation of RBC-NOS, Arginase-1 and the formation of the major product of lipid peroxidation, 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal. To survey the rheological parameters of RBCs like elasticity and plasticity atomic force microscopy-based measurement was applied. Significant morphological and functional differences of RBCs were found between the non-smoking and smoking groups. The phenotypic variations in RBC-S population, even the characteristic biconcave disc-shaped cells, could be connected to impaired NOS3 activation and are compromised in their physiological properties. Membrane lipid studies reveal an elevated lipid oxidation state well paralleled with the changed elastic and plastic activities. These features can form a basic tool in the prenatal health screening conditions; hence the compensatory mechanism of RBC-S population completely fails to sense and rescue the acute oxidative stress conditions.
Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2019        PMID: 31525342     DOI: 10.1016/j.cbi.2019.108821

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Chem Biol Interact        ISSN: 0009-2797            Impact factor:   5.192


  4 in total

1.  Maternal Smoking Highly Affects the Function, Membrane Integrity, and Rheological Properties in Fetal Red Blood Cells.

Authors:  Krisztina N Dugmonits; Payal Chakraborty; Réka Hollandi; Szabolcs Zahorán; Gabriella Pankotai-Bodó; Péter Horváth; Hajnalka Orvos; Edit Hermesz
Journal:  Oxid Med Cell Longev       Date:  2019-11-29       Impact factor: 6.543

2.  Sustained Maternal Smoking Triggers Endothelial-Mediated Oxidative Stress in the Umbilical Cord Vessels, Resulting in Vascular Dysfunction.

Authors:  Szabolcs Zahorán; Péter R Szántó; Nikolett Bódi; Mária Bagyánszki; József Maléth; Péter Hegyi; Tamás Sári; Edit Hermesz
Journal:  Antioxidants (Basel)       Date:  2021-04-09

3.  Mature Twin Neonates Exhibit Oxidative Stress via Nitric Oxide Synthase Dysfunctionality: A Prognostic Stress Marker in the Red Blood Cells and Umbilical Cord Vessels.

Authors:  Payal Chakraborty; Krisztina N Dugmonits; Hajnalka Orvos; Edit Hermesz
Journal:  Antioxidants (Basel)       Date:  2020-09-10

4.  A Dynamic Model for Estimating the Interaction of ROS-PUFA-Antioxidants in Rabbit.

Authors:  Simona Mattioli; Corrado Dimauro; Alberto Cesarani; Alessandro Dal Bosco; Desiree Bartolini; Francesco Galli; Anna Migni; Bartolomeo Sebastiani; Cinzia Signorini; Camille Oger; Giulia Collodel; Cesare Castellini
Journal:  Antioxidants (Basel)       Date:  2022-03-10
  4 in total

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