| Literature DB >> 35159312 |
Peter Dreischer1,2, Michael Duszenko3, Jasmin Stein3, Thomas Wieder1,4.
Abstract
Human erythrocytes are organelle-free cells packaged with iron-containing hemoglobin, specializing in the transport of oxygen. With a total number of approximately 25 trillion cells per individual, the erythrocyte is the most abundant cell type not only in blood but in the whole organism. Despite their low complexity and their inability to transcriptionally upregulate antioxidant defense mechanisms, they display a relatively long life time, of 120 days. This ensures the maintenance of tissue homeostasis where the clearance of old or damaged erythrocytes is kept in balance with erythropoiesis. Whereas the regulatory mechanisms of erythropoiesis have been elucidated over decades of intensive research, the understanding of the mechanisms of erythrocyte clearance still requires some refinement. Here, we present the main pathways leading to eryptosis, the programmed death of erythrocytes, with special emphasis on Ca2+ influx, the generation of ceramide, oxidative stress, kinase activation, and iron metabolism. We also compare stress-induced erythrocyte death with erythrocyte ageing and clearance, and discuss the similarities between eryptosis and ferroptosis, the iron-dependent regulated death of nucleated blood cells. Finally, we focus on the pathologic consequences of deranged eryptosis, and discuss eryptosis in the context of different infectious diseases, e.g., viral or parasitic infections, and hematologic disorders.Entities:
Keywords: DNA damage; anaerobic metabolism; anemia; cell volume; cytoskeleton; ferroptosis; oxidative stress; phosphatidylserine exposure; programmed cell death; protease activation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35159312 PMCID: PMC8834305 DOI: 10.3390/cells11030503
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Figure 1Scheme of erythrocyte generation and differentiation in the bone marrow, and erythrocyte homeostasis. (A) The scheme depicts the development of erythrocyte progenitor cells in the red bone marrow [3]. Death-regulating intracellular proteins are shown on the left and extracellular growth or differentiation factors are shown on the right. The development of white blood cells from CMP is not shown. (B) The pool of mature erythrocytes is fueled by proliferation and differentiation as outlined in (A) Old or damaged cells are removed from the pool by hemolysis, eryptosis or cellular senescence.
Figure 2The two fundamental pathways of erythrocyte cell death. (A) Inducers of hemolysis lead to destruction of the cell membrane, erythrocytes lose their biconcave shape, and Hb is released to the extracellular space (1). Induction of concentration-dependent hemolysis by SiO2 nanoparticles. Hb release is demonstrated by the appearance of red-colored Hb in the supernatant (2) and quantified photometrically. Data are given in % ± SEM, n = 5 (3). Staining of erythrocytes with fluorescence-labeled SiO2 nanoparticles. Note that the nanoparticles are incorporated into the erythrocyte plasma membrane thereby destroying the phospholipid bilayer (4). (B) Inducers of eryptosis lead to cell shrinkage and dissipation of phosphatidylserine asymmetry. Note that the cell membrane stays intact with Hb remaining inside the stressed erythrocytes (1). Absence of substantial hemolysis after incubation with different concentrations of costunolide (2). Concentration-dependent increase of annexin-V-positive erythrocytes by costunolide, i.e., erythrocytes exposing phosphatidylserine on the outer leaflet of the plasma membrane (3), and concomitant decrease of the GSH level in costunolide-treated erythrocytes (4). The data shown in (B) are from [20]. Abbreviations: GSH, glutathione; Hb, hemoglobin; PS, phosphatidylserine; SiO2, silicon dioxide.
Figure 3The main signaling pathways of eryptosis. Different inducers of eryptosis either lead to opening of cation channels and subsequent entry of Ca2+, activation of protein kinase C and subsequent opening of cation channels, activation of sphingomyelinase (SMase) and subsequent generation of ceramide, or clustering of death receptors (Fas) and subsequent activation of caspases. Ca2+ and ceramide combine to induce phosphatidylserine exposure and erythrocyte shrinkage, whereas the activation of proteases (caspases and calpain) leads to rearrangement of the cytoskeleton.
The eryptotic machinery of mature red blood cells.
| Protein Name | Function | References |
|---|---|---|
| Cation channel | Ca2+ entry | Lang et al. [ |
| Sphingomyelinase | Formation of ceramide | Lang et al. [ |
| Protein kinase C | Protein phosphorylation | Klarl et al. [ |
| Nuclear factor κB | Transcription factor 1 | Ghashghaeinia et al. [ |
| Caspase-3 | Cysteinprotease | Mandal et al. [ |
1 Function in nucleated cells.