Abstract

The binding of hemoglobins A, S, and A 2 to red cell membranes prepared by hypotonic lysis from normal blood and blood from persons with sickle cell anemia was quantified under a variety of conditions using hemoglobin labelled by alkylation with 14C-labelled Nitrogen Mustard. Membrane morphology was examined by electron microscopy. Normal membranes were found capable of binding native hemoglobin A and hemoglobin S in similar amounts when incubated at low hemoglobin: membrane ratios, but at high ratios hemoglobin saturation levels of the membranes increased progressively for hemoglobin A, hemoglobin S and hemoglobin A 2, respectively, in order of increasing electropositivity. Binding was unaffected by variations in temperature (4–22 °C) and altered little by the presence of sulfhydryl reagents, but was inhibited at pH levels above 7.35; disrupted at high ionic strength; and dependent on the ionic composition of the media. These findings suggest that electrostatic, but not hydrophobic or sulfhydryl bonds are important in membrane binding of the hemoglobin under the conditions studied. An increased retention of hemoglobin in preparations of membranes from red cells of patients with sickle cell anemia (homozygote S) was attributable to the dense fraction of homozygote S red cells rich in irreversibly sickled cells, and the latter membranes had a smaller residual binding capacity for new hemoglobin. This suggests that in homozygote S cells which have become irreversibly sickled cells in vivo, there are membrane changes which involve alteration and/or blockade of hemoglobin binding sites. These findings support the notion that hemoglobin participates in the dynamic structure of the red cell membrane in a manner which differs in normal and pathological states.

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