Abstract
Labeling red blood cells with Na251CrO4 enabled us to study certain aspects of red cell survival and sequestration from the circulation. As a random labeling procedure, however, the 51Cr method has certain limitations. Therefore, we developed a cohort labeling method using 75Se-methionine as a two-rat procedure. This gives us a clear pulse-labeled population of rat red cells to study the dynamics of sequestration. With this labeling procedure, it was possible to demonstrate that 1) there is an increase in the density of red cells with age, 2) a significant sequestration of red cells from the circulation is apparent at the end of 48 days and essentially is complete at the end of 60 days, 3) there is a corresponding uptake of senescent red cells in the spleen, which peaks at 55 days, and 4) the 60-day end point is sharper and is more definitive when the "specific activity" (cpm per red blood cell) of the labeled red cells in the spleen is compared to that of the red cells still in the circulation. Asialo red cells, obtained by removal of sialic acid with sialidase, frequently have been used as a model for the study of sequestration of senescent red cells. With the technique herein described, it was possible to show that while asialo red cells will inhibit the uptake of labeled asialo red cells, they have no effect on the sequestration of senescent red cells. Presumably, different sites and mechanisms of sequestration are involved.
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