Pfafferott C, Nash G B, Meiselman H J
Biophys J. 1985 May;47(5):695-704. doi: 10.1016/S0006-3495(85)83966-7.
Shear deformation of young and old human red blood cells was examined over a range of shear stresses and suspending phase viscosities (eta o) using a cone-plate Rheoscope. The internal viscosities (eta i) of these cell types differ, and further changes in internal viscosity were induced by alteration of suspension osmolality and hence cell volume. For low suspending viscosities (0.0555 or 0.111 P) old cells tended to tumble in shear flow, whereas young cells achieved stable orientation and deformed. Changes in osmolality, at these external viscosities, altered the percentage of cells deforming, and for each cell type threshold osmolalities (Osm-50) were determined where 50% of cells deformed. The threshold osmolalities were higher for younger cells than for older cells, but the internal viscosities of the two cell types were similar at their respective Osm-50. Threshold osmolalities were also higher for the higher external viscosity, but the ratio of internal to external viscosities (i.e., eta i/eta o) was nearly constant for both external viscosities. Deformation of stably oriented cells increased with increasing shear stress and approached a value limited by cell surface area and volume. For isotonic media, over a wide range of external viscosities and shear stresses, deformation was greater for younger cells than for older cells. However, deformation vs. shear stress data for the two cell types became nearly coincident if young cells were osmotically shrunk to have their internal viscosity close to that for old cells. Increases in external viscosity, at constant shear stress, caused greater deformation for all cells. This effect of external viscosity was not equal for young and old cells; the ratio of old/young cell deformation increased with increasing eta o. However, if deformation was plotted as a function of the ratio lambda = eta i/eta o, at constant shear stress, young and old cell data followed similar paths. Thus the ratio lambda is a major determinant of cell deformation as well as a critical factor affecting stable orientation in shear flow.
使用锥板流变仪,在一系列剪切应力和悬浮相粘度(ηo)范围内,对年轻和年老的人类红细胞的剪切变形进行了检测。这些细胞类型的内部粘度(ηi)不同,并且通过改变悬浮渗透压以及细胞体积,会引起内部粘度的进一步变化。对于低悬浮粘度(0.0555或0.111P),年老细胞在剪切流中倾向于翻滚,而年轻细胞则实现稳定取向并发生变形。在这些外部粘度下,渗透压的变化改变了变形细胞的百分比,并且针对每种细胞类型确定了50%细胞发生变形时的阈值渗透压(Osm-50)。年轻细胞的阈值渗透压高于年老细胞,但两种细胞类型在各自的Osm-50时的内部粘度相似。较高外部粘度时的阈值渗透压也更高,但两种外部粘度下内部与外部粘度之比(即ηi/ηo)几乎恒定。稳定取向细胞的变形随着剪切应力的增加而增加,并接近由细胞表面积和体积限制的值。对于等渗介质,在广泛的外部粘度和剪切应力范围内,年轻细胞的变形大于年老细胞。然而,如果将年轻细胞进行渗透收缩,使其内部粘度接近年老细胞的内部粘度,那么两种细胞类型的变形与剪切应力数据几乎重合。在恒定剪切应力下,外部粘度的增加会导致所有细胞发生更大的变形。外部粘度对年轻和年老细胞的影响并不相同;年老/年轻细胞变形之比随着ηo的增加而增加。然而,如果将变形绘制为λ = ηi/ηo之比的函数,在恒定剪切应力下,年轻和年老细胞的数据遵循相似的路径。因此,λ之比是细胞变形的主要决定因素,也是影响剪切流中稳定取向的关键因素。