Analytical Review: Leaky Red Cells
Open Access
- 1 September 1965
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Society of Hematology in Blood
- Vol. 26 (3) , 367-382
- https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.v26.3.367.367
Abstract
The normal survival of red cells requires maintained regulation of cell size and shape. This regulation is to a large extent dependent upon membrane permeability and the active transport of cations. Agents such as C' that affect permeability markedly by creating large holes in the membrane lead to rapid cell death. Most hemolytic disorders thus far studied involve lesser increases in membrane permeability and hemolysis occurs more gradually by the sequence of colloid osmotic swelling, loss of cell surface, and spherocytosis. With very mild permeability changes, as in hereditary spherocytosis, the cell may compensate for an increased leak-rate for cations by increased active transport. This compensation requires increased glycolysis and optimal metabolic conditions, however, and the cell rapidly decompensates during glucose deprivation or metabolic stress. The interaction between reticuloendothelial tissues and red cells provides such a stress for leaky cells and hastens their destruction.Keywords
This publication has 51 references indexed in Scilit:
- A study of the metabolism of phosphorus in mammalian red cellsBiochemical Journal, 1954
- Autohemolysis and Other Changes Resulting from the Incubation in Vitro of Red Cells from Patients with Congenital Hemolytic AnemiaBlood, 1954
- The rate of sodium extrusion from human erythrocytesThe Journal of Physiology, 1953
- Hereditary SpherocytosisBlood, 1951
- K-Na EXCHANGE ACCOMPANYING THE PROLYTIC LOSS OF K FROM HUMAN RED CELLSThe Journal of general physiology, 1947
- Observations on autohæmolysis in familial acholuric jaundiceThe Journal of Pathology and Bacteriology, 1941
- HEMOLYSINS AS THE CAUSE OF CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL HEMOLYTIC ANEMIASThe Lancet Healthy Longevity, 1938
- Studies on the permeability of erythrocytesBiochemical Journal, 1938
- SUSCEPTIBILITY OF ERYTHROCYTES TO HYPOTONIC HEMOLYSIS AS A FUNCTION OF DISCOIDAL FORMAmerican Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content, 1937
- The thermodynamic analysis of the observed osmotic pressures of protein salts in solutions of finite concentrationProceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Containing Papers of a Mathematical and Physical Character, 1929