| Literature DB >> 32457644 |
Anna Bogdanova1, Lars Kaestner2,3, Greta Simionato2,4, Amittha Wickrema5, Asya Makhro1.
Abstract
Mean values of hematological parameters are currently used in the clinical laboratory settings to characterize red blood cell properties. Those include red blood cell indices, osmotic fragility test, eosin 5-maleimide (EMA) test, and deformability assessment using ektacytometry to name a few. Diagnosis of hereditary red blood cell disorders is complemented by identification of mutations in distinct genes that are recognized "molecular causes of disease." The power of these measurements is clinically well-established. However, the evidence is growing that the available information is not enough to understand the determinants of severity of diseases and heterogeneity in manifestation of pathologies such as hereditary hemolytic anemias. This review focuses on an alternative approach to assess red blood cell properties based on heterogeneity of red blood cells and characterization of fractions of cells with similar properties such as density, hydration, membrane loss, redox state, Ca2+ levels, and morphology. Methodological approaches to detect variance of red blood cell properties will be presented. Causes of red blood cell heterogeneity include cell age, environmental stress as well as shear and metabolic stress, and multiple other factors. Heterogeneity of red blood cell properties is also promoted by pathological conditions that are not limited to the red blood cells disorders, but inflammatory state, metabolic diseases and cancer. Therapeutic interventions such as splenectomy and transfusion as well as drug administration also impact the variance in red blood cell properties. Based on the overview of the studies in this area, the possible applications of heterogeneity in red blood cell properties as prognostic and diagnostic marker commenting on the power and selectivity of such markers are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: age; erythroid precursor cells; heterogeneity; morphology; red blood cells
Year: 2020 PMID: 32457644 PMCID: PMC7221019 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2020.00392
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
Overview of parameters showing inter-cellular heterogeneity as well as basic principle and methodological approaches of their detection in single cells and sub-populations.
| Parameter | Indicator | Method | References |
| Shape/size | Microscopy: Blood smears, images of living cells (snapshots, time series in flow, microfluidics), | ||
| Volume | Confocal microscopy + 3D deconvolution | ||
| Scanning probe microscopy (semi quantitative) | |||
| Flow cytometry | |||
| Density | Fractionation in Percoll-, Stractan or similar density gradients | ||
| Lab-on-a-chip approaches | |||
| Flow cytometry Cell-flow properties analyzer | |||
| Membrane surface/EMA test | Flow cytometry | ||
| Free Ca2+/channel activity | Fluorescent dyes for Ca2+ Detection of ionic currents across the membranes of single cells | Flow cytometry and fluorescence microscopy Patch-clamp incl. automated planar chips | |
| Redox state and metabolism | Fluorescent dyes for reduced thiols (e.g., thiol tracker, monobromobimane), Fluorescent dyes for N2O3 (DAF-DA), Dyes for detection of H2O2, ONOO, HO* (e.g., H2DCF-DA) Single cell metabolomics (not yet used for red blood cells) | Flow cytometry | |
| Hb levels and variance | Antibodies with fluorescent tags | Flow cytometry, | |
| Age | Labeling of cells (biotin conjugated with fluorescent tag or staining with PKH dyes) Reticulocyte count RNA-positive or Transferrin receptor-positive | Flow cytometry, microscopy |
FIGURE 1An example of heterogeneity of RBC density revealed by fractionation of RBCs on a self-forming Percoll density gradient. Composition of light, medium and high-density fractions vary depending on human health and environmental stress. About 15–20% of RBCs of healthy human donors forming low density are reticulocytes. However, along with young cells this fraction is “contaminated” with swollen RBCs at the terminal senescence stage (Lew and Tiffert, 2013). Medium fraction is formed by mature RBCs, and heavy dehydrated cells are those with senescent phenotype.
FIGURE 2Schematic representation of the possible causes of heterogeneity for erythroid precursor cells within bone marrow. Gradients in oxygen availability, chemokines and other signaling messengers create a plethora of conditions in which cells find themselves during differentiation. For details see the text.
FIGURE 3Selected parameters that change during RBC aging following exponential or linear kinetics as cells turn from reticulocytes to mature cells and finally enter the senescent stage. Percentage of reticulocytes, mature cells, and dense senescent cells shown in the scheme correspond to those in adult healthy donors. For more details see Lutz and Bogdanova (2013) and the text.
FIGURE 4Summary on the environmental causes imposing heterogeneity of circulating RBCs. Exposure of the organism to high altitude or practicing endurance sport as well as dietary preferences cause durable or acute impact on the RBC properties. Along with RBC diseases (anemia, polycythemia), pathologies such as hypertension, diabetes, infection, trauma, cancer, and further systemic diseases are influencing both erythropoietic niche and the circulating cells. All these macroenvironmental stresses translated into the changes in microenvironment for erythroid precursors and circulating RBCs. Shear, alterations in pH and oxygen levels, proinflammatory cytokines, and hormones, as well as drugs work to shape the features of each individual RBC resulting in an increase in the inter-cellular heterogeneity.