Abstract

Human red blood cells were treated in different ways to alter their membrane deformability, and the hydrodynamic behavior of these altered cells was studied using the steric field-flow fractionation (FFF) technique. The relationships between cell retention in the FFF channel, flow-rate of the carrier fluid and the applied field strength were studied for normal and glutaraldehyde-fixed human red cells, and separation conditions were optimized. The effect of flow-induced hydrodynamic lift forces on red cell retention in the steric FFF channel was studied, and the results suggest that the membrane deformability of the red cell is an important factor contributing to the lift force, besides other previously described effects due to density and flow velocity. Using steric FFF, a mixture of normal and glutaraldehyde-fixed human red cells was completely separated with a resolution twice that found in published d ata from gel permeation, another hydrodynamic separation technique. Partial loss of membrane deformability, induced by different degrees of glutaraldehyde-fixation, by diamide, or by a thermal treatment, has also been studied. Steric FFF is thus shown to have potential for rapid separation and differentiation of red cells with different density and membrane deformability, conditions known to be associated with, e.g., cell senescence and certain hematological diseases.

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