A comparative study of the properties of nuclear and non-nuclear erythrocytes in experimental hypoxia. The phospholipid and fatty acid composition of individual phospholipids, the content of free fatty acids in the composition of nuclear-free and nuclear red blood cells were determined by thin-layer chromatography. The method of laser interference microscopy was used to study the morphometric characteristics of nuclear and nuclear-free red blood cells and the distribution of hemoglobin. Conformational changes in the hemoporphyrin of nuclear and nuclear-free red blood cells under hypoxia were studied by Raman spectroscopy. It has been shown that under conditions of hypoxia, changes in the phospholipid and fatty acid composition occur in the membranes of both nuclear and non-nuclear erythrocytes, leading to the accumulation of lysoforms of phospholipids, diacylglycerol and free fatty acids, as well as to an increase in the degree of saturation of fatty acids in phospholipids. These changes indicate structural changes in the membrane of nuclear-free and nuclear red blood cells and, as a result of this, functional changes both on the part of the red blood cell in general and the main oxygen-transporting protein of red blood cells - hemoglobin.
Read full abstract