Department of Veterinary Medicine, University of Perugia, Perugia, Italy.
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, University of Colorado Denver - Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, CO, United States of America.
Blood Transfus. 2023 Jul;21(4):314-326. doi: 10.2450/2022.0118-22. Epub 2022 Jul 25.
The use of omics technologies in human transfusion medicine has improved our understanding of the red blood cell (RBC) storage lesion(s). Despite significant progress towards understanding the storage lesion(s) of human RBCs, a comparison of basal and post-storage RBC metabolism across multiple species using omics technologies has not yet been reported, and is the focus of this study.
Blood was collected in a standard bag system (CPD-SAG-Mannitol) from dogs (n=8), horses, bovines, and donkeys (n=6). All bags were stored at 4°C for up to 42 days (i.e., the end of the shelf life in Italian veterinary clinics) and sampled weekly for metabolomics analyses. In addition, data comparisons to our ongoing Zoomics project are included to compare this study's results with those of non-human primates and humans.
Significant interspecies differences in RBC metabolism were observed at baseline, at the time of donation, with bovine showing significantly higher levels of metabolites in the tryptophan/kynurenine pathway; dogs showing elevated levels of high-energy compounds (especially adenosine triphosphate and S-adenosyl-methionine) and equine (donkey and horse) RBCs showing almost overlapping phenotypes, with the highest levels of free branched chain amino acids, glycolytic metabolites (including 2,3-diphosphoglycerate), higher total glutathione pools, and elevated metabolites of the folate pathway compared to the other species. Strikingly, previously described metabolic markers of the storage lesion(s) in humans followed similar trends across all species, though the rate of accumulation/depletion of metabolites in energy and redox metabolism varied by species, with equine blood showing the lowest degree of storage lesion(s).
These results interrogate RBC metabolism across a range of mammalian species and improve our understanding of both human and veterinary blood storage and transfusion.
组学技术在人类输血医学中的应用提高了我们对红细胞(RBC)储存损伤的认识。尽管在理解人类 RBC 的储存损伤方面取得了重大进展,但使用组学技术对多种物种的基础和储存后 RBC 代谢进行比较尚未报道,这也是本研究的重点。
从狗(n=8)、马、牛和驴(n=6)中用标准袋系统(CPD-SAG-甘露醇)采集血液。所有袋子都在 4°C 下储存长达 42 天(即意大利兽医诊所的货架期结束),并每周进行代谢组学分析采样。此外,还包括与我们正在进行的 Zoomics 项目的数据比较,以比较本研究的结果与非人类灵长类动物和人类的结果。
在基线时、捐赠时观察到 RBC 代谢在物种间存在显著差异,牛在色氨酸/犬尿氨酸途径中表现出明显更高水平的代谢物;狗表现出更高水平的高能化合物(特别是三磷酸腺苷和 S-腺苷甲硫氨酸),而马科(驴和马)的 RBC 表现出几乎重叠的表型,具有最高水平的游离支链氨基酸、糖酵解代谢物(包括 2,3-二磷酸甘油酸)、更高的总谷胱甘肽池和升高的叶酸途径代谢物与其他物种相比。引人注目的是,先前描述的人类储存损伤的代谢标志物在所有物种中都呈现出相似的趋势,但能量和氧化还原代谢物的积累/消耗速度因物种而异,马科血液显示出最低程度的储存损伤。
这些结果检验了一系列哺乳动物物种的 RBC 代谢,并提高了我们对人类和兽医血液储存和输血的理解。