Abstract

Red blood cells (RBC) are the most abundant cells in the blood. Despite powerful defense systems against chemical and mechanical stressors, their life span is limited to about 120 days in healthy humans and further shortened in patients with kidney failure. Changes in the cell membrane potential and cation permeability trigger a cascade of events that lead to exposure of phosphatidylserine on the outer leaflet of the RBC membrane. The translocation of phosphatidylserine is an important step in a process that eventually results in eryptosis, the programmed death of an RBC. The regulation of eryptosis is complex and involves several cellular pathways, such as the regulation of non-selective cation channels. Increased cytosolic calcium concentration results in scramblase and floppase activation, exposing phosphatidylserine on the cell surface, leading to early clearance of RBCs from the circulation by phagocytic cells. While eryptosis is physiologically meaningful to recycle iron and other RBC constituents in healthy subjects, it is augmented under pathological conditions, such as kidney failure. In chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients, the number of eryptotic RBC is significantly increased, resulting in a shortened RBC life span that further compounds renal anemia. In CKD patients, uremic toxins, oxidative stress, hypoxemia, and inflammation contribute to the increased eryptosis rate. Eryptosis may have an impact on renal anemia, and depending on the degree of shortened RBC life span, the administration of erythropoiesis-stimulating agents is often insufficient to attain desired hemoglobin target levels. The goal of this review is to indicate the importance of eryptosis as a process closely related to life span reduction, aggravating renal anemia.

Highlights

  • Red blood cells (RBCs) are vital to life, and their oxygen carrying role is indispensable to the function of tissues and organs

  • Eryptosis may reduce RBC survival and contribute to renal anemia since in some patients the erythropoiesis rate cannot compensate for this increased loss (Lang et al, 2017)

  • We describe the role of eryptosis in the pathogenesis of renal anemia, an aspect frequently neglected in the clinical practice

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Red blood cells (RBCs) are vital to life, and their oxygen carrying role is indispensable to the function of tissues and organs. RBCs undergo senescence and cell death after around 120 days. RBCs can undergo a distinct mechanism of death, a process of programmed RBC death similar to apoptosis, called eryptosis (Qadri et al, 2017).

Eryptosis in Renal Anemia
RBC MICROVESICLES RELEASE
THE ROLE OF IRON IN ANEMIA AND ERYPTOSIS
THE ROLE OF REACTIVE OXYGEN SPECIES IN ERYPTOSIS
HYPOXIA IN DIALYSIS PATIENTS AND ITS ASSOCIATION WITH ERYPTOSIS
ION CHANNEL MODIFICATIONS IN ERYPTOSIS
CYTOSKELETON MODIFICATIONS
RBC LIFE SPAN IN HEALTH AND CKD
CONCLUSION
Findings
AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
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