Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, University of Colorado Denver - Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, CO, USA.
Department of Biochemistry, University of Texas Houston - School of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA.
Haematologica. 2018 Feb;103(2):361-372. doi: 10.3324/haematol.2017.178608. Epub 2017 Oct 27.
Hypoxanthine catabolism is potentially dangerous as it fuels production of urate and, most importantly, hydrogen peroxide. However, it is unclear whether accumulation of intracellular and supernatant hypoxanthine in stored red blood cell units is clinically relevant for transfused recipients. Leukoreduced red blood cells from glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase-normal or -deficient human volunteers were stored in AS-3 under normoxic, hyperoxic, or hypoxic conditions (with oxygen saturation ranging from <3% to >95%). Red blood cells from healthy human volunteers were also collected at sea level or after 1-7 days at high altitude (>5000 m). Finally, C57BL/6J mouse red blood cells were incubated with C-aspartate or C-adenosine under normoxic or hypoxic conditions, with or without deoxycoformycin, a purine deaminase inhibitor. Metabolomics analyses were performed on human and mouse red blood cells stored for up to 42 or 14 days, respectively, and correlated with 24 h post-transfusion red blood cell recovery. Hypoxanthine increased in stored red blood cell units as a function of oxygen levels. Stored red blood cells from human glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase-deficient donors had higher levels of deaminated purines. Hypoxia and decreased purine oxidation and enhanced purine salvage reactions in human and mouse red blood cells, which was partly explained by decreased adenosine monophosphate deaminase activity. In addition, hypoxanthine levels negatively correlated with post-transfusion red blood cell recovery in mice and - preliminarily albeit significantly - in humans. In conclusion, hypoxanthine is an metabolic marker of the red blood cell storage lesion that negatively correlates with post-transfusion recovery Storage-dependent hypoxanthine accumulation is ameliorated by hypoxia-induced decreases in purine deamination reaction rates.
次黄嘌呤分解代谢可能很危险,因为它会促进尿酸的产生,最重要的是,促进过氧化氢的产生。然而,储存的红细胞单位中细胞内和上清液次黄嘌呤的积累是否与接受输血的患者相关,目前尚不清楚。来自葡萄糖-6-磷酸脱氢酶正常或缺乏的人类志愿者的白细胞减少的红细胞在 AS-3 中于常氧、高氧或低氧条件下(氧饱和度范围从<3%到>95%)储存。来自健康人类志愿者的红细胞也在海平面或海拔>5000 米的高度采集 1-7 天后收集。最后,C57BL/6J 小鼠红细胞在常氧或低氧条件下与 C-天冬氨酸或 C-腺苷孵育,有或没有脱氧胞苷,一种嘌呤脱氨酶抑制剂。对储存长达 42 天或 14 天的人类和小鼠红细胞进行代谢组学分析,并与输血后 24 小时红细胞恢复相关。次黄嘌呤随着氧水平的升高而在储存的红细胞单位中增加。来自人类葡萄糖-6-磷酸脱氢酶缺乏供体的储存红细胞具有更高水平的脱氨嘌呤。低氧和降低的嘌呤氧化和增强的嘌呤回收反应在人类和小鼠红细胞中,部分原因是腺苷一磷酸脱氨酶活性降低。此外,次黄嘌呤水平与小鼠输血后红细胞恢复呈负相关,在人类中-初步但显著-呈负相关。总之,次黄嘌呤是红细胞储存损伤的代谢标志物,与输血后恢复呈负相关 储存依赖性次黄嘌呤积累通过缺氧诱导的嘌呤脱氨反应速率降低得到改善。