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Oxygenation-deoxygenation cycle of erythrocytes modulates submicron cell membrane fluctuations

Abstract

Low frequency submicron fluctuations of the cell membrane were recently shown to be characteristic for different cell types, nevertheless their physiological role is yet unknown. Point dark-field microscopy based recordings of these local displacements of cell membrane in human erythrocytes, subjected to cyclic oxygenation and deoxygenation, reveals a reversible decrease of displacement amplitudes from 290 +/- 49 to 160 +/- 32 nm, respectively. A higher rate of RBC adhesion to a glass substratum is observed upon deoxygenation, probably due to a low level of fluctuation amplitudes. The variation in the amplitude of these displacements were reconstituted in open RBC ghosts by perfusing them with composite solutions of 2,3 diphosphoglycerate, Mg+2, and MgATP, which mimic the intracellular metabolite concentrations in oxygenated and deoxygenated erythrocytes. The mere change in intracellular Mg+2 during oxygenation-deoxygenation cycle is sufficient to explain these findings. The results imply that the magnitude of fluctuations amplitude is directly connected with cell deformability. This study suggests that the physiological cycle of oxygenation-deoxygenation provides a dynamic control of the bending deformability and adhesiveness characteristics of the RBC via a Mg+2-dependent reversible assembly of membrane-skeleton proteins. The existing coupling between oxygenation-deoxygenation of the RBC and its mechanical properties is expected to play a key role in blood microcirculation and may constitute an example of a general situation for other circulating blood cells, where the metabolic control of cytoskeleton dynamics may modulate their dynamic mechanical properties

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