| Red Blood Cell Membrane Fluctuations and Shape Controlled by ATP-Induced Cytoskeletal Defects Biophysical Journal, Volume 88, Issue 3, 1 March 2005, Pages 1859-1874 N.S. Gov and S.A. Safran Abstract We show theoretically how adenosine 5′-triphosphate (ATP)-induced dynamic dissociations of spectrin filaments (from each other and from the membrane) in the cytoskeleton network of red blood cells (RBC) can explain in a unified manner both the measured fluctuation amplitude as well as the observed shape transformations as a function of intracellular ATP concentration. Static defects can be induced by external stresses such as those present when RBCs pass through small capillaries. We suggest that the partially freed actin at these defect sites may explain the activation of the CFTR membrane-bound protein and the subsequent release of ATP by RBCs subjected to deformations. Our theoretical predictions can be tested by experiments that measure the correlation between variations in the binding of actin to spectrin, the activity of CFTR, and the amount of ATP released. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (354 kb) |
| Temperature Transition of Human Hemoglobin at Body Temperature: Effects of Calcium Biophysical Journal, Volume 80, Issue 6, 1 June 2001, Pages 2622-2630 Christina Kelemen, Shu Chien and G.M. Artmann Abstract We studied the effects of calcium ion concentration on the temperature dependence of rheological behavior of human red blood cells (RBCs) and concentrated hemoglobin solutions. Our previous study (G. M. Artmann, C. Kelemen, D. Porst, G. Büldt, and S. Chien, 1998, , 75:3179–3183) showed a critical temperature () of 36.4±0.3°C at which the RBCs underwent a transition from non-passage to passage through 1.3-m micropipettes in response to an aspiration pressure of −2.3kPa. An increase in intracellular Ca concentration by using the ionophore A23187 reduced the passability of intact RBCs through small micropipettes above ; the micropipette diameter needed for >90% passage increased to 1.7m. Viscometry of concentrated hemoglobin solutions (45 and 50g/dl) showed a sudden viscosity transition at 36±1°C () at all calcium concentrations investigated. Below , the viscosity value of the concentrated hemoglobin solution at 1.8mM Ca was higher than that at other concentrations (0.2M, 9mM, and 18mM). Above , the viscosity was almost Ca independent. At 1.8mM Ca and 36±1°C, the activation energy calculated from the viscometry data showed a strong dependence on the hemoglobin concentration. We propose that the transition of rheological behavior is attributable to a high-to-low viscosity transition mediated by a partial release of the hemoglobin-bound water. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (396 kb) |
| Echinocyte Shapes: Bending, Stretching, and Shear Determine Spicule Shape and Spacing Biophysical Journal, Volume 82, Issue 4, 1 April 2002, Pages 1756-1772 Ranjan Mukhopadhyay, H.W. Gerald Lim and Michael Wortis Abstract We study the shapes of human red blood cells using continuum mechanics. In particular, we model the crenated, echinocytic shapes and show how they may arise from a competition between the bending energy of the plasma membrane and the stretching/shear elastic energies of the membrane skeleton. In contrast to earlier work, we calculate spicule shapes exactly by solving the equations of continuum mechanics subject to appropriate boundary conditions. A simple scaling analysis of this competition reveals an elastic length Λ, which sets the length scale for the spicules and is, thus, related to the number of spicules experimentally observed on the fully developed echinocyte. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (200 kb) |
Copyright © 1997 The Biophysical Society. All rights reserved.
Biophysical Journal, Volume 72, Issue 3, 1434-1441, 1 March 1997
doi:10.1016/S0006-3495(97)78790-3
Research Article
G.M. Artmann, K.L. Sung, T. Horn, D. Whittemore, G. Norwich and S. Chien
Department of Applied Cell Biophysics, FH Aachen, Jülich, Germany. artmann@fh-aachen.de
When a discocytic erythrocyte (RBC) was partially aspirated into a 1.5-microns glass pipette with a high negative aspiration pressure (delta P = -3.9 kPa), held in the pipette for 30 s (holding time, th), and then released, it underwent a discocyte-echinocyte shape transformation. The degree of shape transformation increased with an increase in th. The echinocytes recovered spontaneously to discocytes in approximately 10min, and there was no significant difference in recovery time at 20.9 degrees C, 29.5 degrees C, and 37.4 degrees C, respectively. At 11 degrees C the recovery time was significantly elevated to 40.1 +/- 6.7min. At 20.9 degrees C the shape recovery time varied directly with the isotropic RBC tension induced by the pipetting. Sodium orthovanadate (vanadate, 200 microM), which inhibits the phospholipid translocase, blocks the shape recovery. Chlorpromazine (CP, 25 microM) reversed the pipette-induced echinocytic shape to discocytic in < 2min, and the RBC became a spherostomatocyte-II after another 30min. It was hypothesized that the increase in cytosolic pressure during the pipette aspiration induced an isotropic tension in the RBC membrane followed by a net inside-to-outside membrane lipid translocation. After a sudden release of the aspiration pressure the cytosolic pressure and the membrane tension normalized immediately, but the translocated phospholipids remained temporarily "trapped" in the outer layer, causing an area excess and hence the echinocytic shape. The phospholipid translocase activity, when not inhibited by vanadate, caused a gradual return of the translocated phospholipids to the inner layer, and the RBC shape recovered with time.