Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique-Université Pierre et Marie Curie Paris6, UMR 7150, Roscoff, France.
PLoS One. 2010 Feb 26;5(2):e9447. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0009447.
The mechanical, rheological and shape properties of red blood cells are determined by their cortical cytoskeleton, evolutionarily optimized to provide the dynamic deformability required for flow through capillaries much narrower than the cell's diameter. The shear stress induced by such flow, as well as the local membrane deformations generated in certain pathological conditions, such as sickle cell anemia, have been shown to increase membrane permeability, based largely on experimentation with red cell suspensions. We attempted here the first measurements of membrane currents activated by a local and controlled membrane deformation in single red blood cells under on-cell patch clamp to define the nature of the stretch-activated currents.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: The cell-attached configuration of the patch-clamp technique was used to allow recordings of single channel activity in intact red blood cells. Gigaohm seal formation was obtained with and without membrane deformation. Deformation was induced by the application of a negative pressure pulse of 10 mmHg for less than 5 s. Currents were only detected when the membrane was seen domed under negative pressure within the patch-pipette. K(+) and Cl(-) currents were strictly dependent on the presence of Ca(2+). The Ca(2+)-dependent currents were transient, with typical decay half-times of about 5-10 min, suggesting the spontaneous inactivation of a stretch-activated Ca(2+) permeability (PCa). These results indicate that local membrane deformations can transiently activate a Ca(2+) permeability pathway leading to increased Ca(2+), secondary activation of Ca(2+)-sensitive K(+) channels (Gardos channel, IK1, KCa3.1), and hyperpolarization-induced anion currents.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The stretch-activated transient PCa observed here under local membrane deformation is a likely contributor to the Ca(2+)-mediated effects observed during the normal aging process of red blood cells, and to the increased Ca(2+) content of red cells in certain hereditary anemias such as thalassemia and sickle cell anemia.
红细胞的机械、流变和形状特性由其皮质细胞骨架决定,细胞骨架经过进化优化,为红细胞提供了通过比细胞直径窄得多的毛细血管所需的动态可变形性。这种流动引起的切应力以及在某些病理条件下(如镰状细胞贫血)产生的局部膜变形已被证明会增加膜通透性,这主要基于红细胞悬浮液的实验。我们在这里首次尝试在单细胞贴附式膜片钳下通过局部和受控的膜变形来测量激活的膜电流,以定义拉伸激活电流的性质。
方法/主要发现:膜片钳技术的细胞附着构型用于允许在完整的红细胞中记录单通道活性。通过应用 10mmHg 的负压脉冲在不到 5 秒的时间内获得了千兆欧姆密封。仅在负压下观察到膜在膜片钳内隆起时才检测到电流。K(+) 和 Cl(-)电流严格依赖于 Ca(2+)的存在。Ca(2+)依赖性电流是瞬态的,典型的衰减半衰期约为 5-10 分钟,表明拉伸激活的 Ca(2+)通透性(PCa)自发失活。这些结果表明,局部膜变形可以瞬时激活 Ca(2+)通透性途径,导致 Ca(2+)增加,Ca(2+)敏感的 K(+)通道(Gardos 通道,IK1,KCa3.1)的二次激活,以及超极化诱导的阴离子电流。
结论/意义:在局部膜变形下观察到的拉伸激活瞬态 PCa 可能是导致红细胞正常老化过程中观察到的 Ca(2+)介导效应的原因之一,也是某些遗传性贫血(如地中海贫血和镰状细胞贫血)中红细胞 Ca(2+)含量增加的原因之一。