Issue 6-7, 2006

An altered oxidant defense system in red blood cells affects their ability to release nitric oxide-stimulating ATP

Abstract

A novel microflow technique is used to demonstrate that a weakened oxidant defense system found in diabetic erythrocytes leads to decreased levels of deformation-induced release of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) from erythrocytes. Addition of an oxidant to rabbit erythrocytes resulted in a 63% decrease in deformation-induced ATP release before eventually recovering to a value that was statistically equivalent to the initial value. Inhibition of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase prevents recovery from the oxidant attack. Finally, results indicated that the ATP release from the erythrocytes of type II diabetics (91 nM ± 10 nM) was less than half of that measured from the erythrocytes of healthy controls (190 ± 10 nM). These data suggest that the antioxidant status of erythrocytes is a critical determinant in the ability of these cells to release ATP, a known nitric oxide stimulus.

Graphical abstract: An altered oxidant defense system in red blood cells affects their ability to release nitric oxide-stimulating ATP

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
24 Mar 2006
Accepted
27 Apr 2006
First published
19 May 2006

Mol. BioSyst., 2006,2, 305-311

An altered oxidant defense system in red blood cells affects their ability to release nitric oxide-stimulating ATP

J. Carroll, M. Raththagala, W. Subasinghe, S. Baguzis, T. D'amico Oblak, P. Root and D. Spence, Mol. BioSyst., 2006, 2, 305 DOI: 10.1039/B604362N

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