Abstract

A diffusion cell was used to examine the effect of HbS polymerization on the oxygen effective diffusivity, D eff , in packed sickle erythrocytes compared to that in packed normal clythrocytes at 25°. In increasing PO 2 experiments. the samples were fully oxygen saturated after a very brief transient. In decreasing PO 2 experiments, the average oxygen tension decreased progressively over the time course of the experiment. At full oxygen saturation, D eff in the packed sickle erythrocyte samples was not significantly different from that in normal erythrocytes and was in agreement with prior workers' measurements of unfacilitated oxygen diffusion. D eff measured in the decreasing PO 2 experiments on packed sickle erythrocytes was significantly different from that in normal erythrocytes. As the average oxygen tension decreased, D eff in packed normal erythrocytes increased to a maximum of 40% over its unfacilitated value and then decreased. In contrast, in sickle erythrocytes which contained over 90% HbS, as PO 2 decreased, D eff increased only slightly and then decreased dramatically. The results of decreasing PO 2 experiments on sickle erythrocytes containing significant amounts of other hemoglobins (HbF, HbC) were different from those of both the normal erythrocytes and sickle erythrocytes with dominant HbS fraction, showing the effect of hemoglobin composition on effective diffusivity. These results demonstrate a dramatic effect of HbS polymerization on the resistance to oxygen transport in sickle erythrocytes.

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