Abstract

Metabolic homeostasis in animals depends critically on evolved mechanisms by which red blood cell (RBC) hemoglobin (Hb) senses oxygen (O2) need and responds accordingly. The entwined regulation of ATP production and antioxidant systems within the RBC also exploits Hb-based O2-sensitivity to respond to various physiologic and pathophysiologic stresses. O2 offloading, for example, promotes glycolysis in order to generate both 2,3-DPG (a negative allosteric effector of Hb O2 binding) and ATP. Alternatively, generation of the nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) critical for reducing systems is favored under the oxidizing conditions of O2 abundance. Dynamic control of ATP not only ensures the functional activity of ion pumps and cellular flexibility, but also contributes to the availability of vasoregulatory ATP that can be exported when necessary, for example in hypoxia or upon RBC deformation in microvessels. RBC ATP export in response to hypoxia or deformation dilates blood vessels in order to promote efficient O2 delivery. The ability of RBCs to adapt to the metabolic environment via differential control of these metabolites is impaired in the face of enzymopathies [pyruvate kinase deficiency; glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency], blood banking, diabetes mellitus, COVID-19 or sepsis, and sickle cell disease. The emerging availability of therapies capable of augmenting RBC ATP, including newly established uses of allosteric effectors and metabolite-specific additive solutions for RBC transfusates, raises the prospect of clinical interventions to optimize or correct RBC function via these metabolite delivery mechanisms.

Highlights

  • The ability of red blood cell (RBC) to adapt to the metabolic environment via differential control of these metabolites is impaired in the face of enzymopathies [pyruvate kinase deficiency; glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency], blood banking, diabetes mellitus, COVID-19 or sepsis, and sickle cell disease

  • Rogers and coworkers showed that RBC antioxidant systems fail when hexose monophosphate pathway (HMP) flux is blunted by altered cdB3 protein assembly/phosphorylation caused by aberrant Hbs or hypoxia (Rogers et al, 2009, 2013; Ferru et al, 2011)

  • We recently demonstrated the critical role of the ATP transporter pannexin 1 (Px1) in the ability of RBCs to export vasoregulatory ATP into the plasma in vivo and into the supernatant in vitro (Kirby et al, 2021)

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Summary

Introduction

RBC ATP export in response to hypoxia or deformation dilates blood vessels in order to promote efficient O2 delivery. The exported ATP can act to limit the adhesivity of RBCs to endothelial cells, effect vasodilation, and may have anti-permeability (Kolosova et al, 2008) and other roles.

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