Vesiculation in irradiated and cation-leaky-stored red blood cells

TRANSFUSION(2024)

引用 0|浏览2
暂无评分
摘要
Background: Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are released by red blood cells (RBCs) throughout their life-span and also during hypothermic storage when they accumulate in the blood bag. We queried whether stored RBCs with increased cation permeability, either from donors with familial pseudohyperkalaemia (FP) or caused by irradiation, vesiculate more readily.Study Design and Methods: Recent technical advances have revealed at least two sub-populations of MVs in RBC storage units: macrovesicles (2-6 mu m) and microvesicles (1-2 mu m). Using nanoparticle tracking analysis, imaging flow cytometry, and protein quantification methods, we measured and characterized vesicles released by RBCs from control and FP individuals at three different storage time-points (day 4, day 17, and day 29). The RBCs had either been stored untreated or irradiated on either day 1 or day 14 of storage.Results: We found no difference in the number or size of vesicles released between cation-leaky FP RBCs and non-FP controls. Similarly, irradiated and non-irradiated RBCs showed very similar patterns of vesicle release to during cold-storage. The only significant difference in vesicle release was the increase in accumulated vesicles with length of storage time which has been reported previously.Discussion: EVs in stored blood are potential contributors to adverse transfusion reactions. The number of vesicles released during 35-day hypothermic storage varies between donors and increases with storage duration. However, increased cation permeability and irradiation do not appear to affect vesicle formation during RBC cold-storage.
更多
查看译文
关键词
cation leak,cold-storage,familial pseudohyperkalaemia,irradiation,red blood cell
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要