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Significant Biochemical, Biophysical and Metabolic Diversity in Circulating Human Cord Blood Reticulocytes

BACKGROUND: The transition from enucleated reticulocytes to mature normocytes is marked by substantial remodeling of the erythrocytic cytoplasm and membrane. Despite conspicuous changes, most studies describe the maturing reticulocyte as a homogenous erythropoietic cell type. While reticulocyte stag...

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Autores principales: Malleret, Benoît, Xu, Fenggao, Mohandas, Narla, Suwanarusk, Rossarin, Chu, Cindy, Leite, Juliana A., Low, Kayen, Turner, Claudia, Sriprawat, Kanlaya, Zhang, Rou, Bertrand, Olivier, Colin, Yves, Costa, Fabio T. M., Ong, Choon Nam, Ng, Mah Lee, Lim, Chwee Teck, Nosten, Francois, Rénia, Laurent, Russell, Bruce
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3793000/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24116088
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0076062
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author Malleret, Benoît
Xu, Fenggao
Mohandas, Narla
Suwanarusk, Rossarin
Chu, Cindy
Leite, Juliana A.
Low, Kayen
Turner, Claudia
Sriprawat, Kanlaya
Zhang, Rou
Bertrand, Olivier
Colin, Yves
Costa, Fabio T. M.
Ong, Choon Nam
Ng, Mah Lee
Lim, Chwee Teck
Nosten, Francois
Rénia, Laurent
Russell, Bruce
author_facet Malleret, Benoît
Xu, Fenggao
Mohandas, Narla
Suwanarusk, Rossarin
Chu, Cindy
Leite, Juliana A.
Low, Kayen
Turner, Claudia
Sriprawat, Kanlaya
Zhang, Rou
Bertrand, Olivier
Colin, Yves
Costa, Fabio T. M.
Ong, Choon Nam
Ng, Mah Lee
Lim, Chwee Teck
Nosten, Francois
Rénia, Laurent
Russell, Bruce
author_sort Malleret, Benoît
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The transition from enucleated reticulocytes to mature normocytes is marked by substantial remodeling of the erythrocytic cytoplasm and membrane. Despite conspicuous changes, most studies describe the maturing reticulocyte as a homogenous erythropoietic cell type. While reticulocyte staging based on fluorescent RNA stains such as thiazole orange have been useful in a clinical setting; these ‘sub-vital’ stains may confound delicate studies on reticulocyte biology and may preclude their use in heamoparasite invasion studies. DESIGN AND METHODS: Here we use highly purified populations of reticulocytes isolated from cord blood, sorted by flow cytometry into four sequential subpopulations based on transferrin receptor (CD71) expression: CD71high, CD71medium, CD71low and CD71negative. Each of these subgroups was phenotyped in terms of their, morphology, membrane antigens, biomechanical properties and metabolomic profile. RESULTS: Superficially CD71high and CD71medium reticulocytes share a similar gross morphology (large and multilobular) when compared to the smaller, smooth and increasingly concave reticulocytes as seen in the in the CD71low and CD71negativesamples. However, between each of the four sample sets we observe significant decreases in shear modulus, cytoadhesive capacity, erythroid receptor expression (CD44, CD55, CD147, CD235R, and CD242) and metabolite concentrations. Interestingly increasing amounts of boric acid was found in the mature reticulocytes. CONCLUSIONS: Reticulocyte maturation is a dynamic and continuous process, confounding efforts to rigidly classify them. Certainly this study does not offer an alternative classification strategy; instead we used a nondestructive sampling method to examine key phenotypic changes of in reticulocytes. Our study emphasizes a need to focus greater attention on reticulocyte biology.
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spelling pubmed-37930002013-10-10 Significant Biochemical, Biophysical and Metabolic Diversity in Circulating Human Cord Blood Reticulocytes Malleret, Benoît Xu, Fenggao Mohandas, Narla Suwanarusk, Rossarin Chu, Cindy Leite, Juliana A. Low, Kayen Turner, Claudia Sriprawat, Kanlaya Zhang, Rou Bertrand, Olivier Colin, Yves Costa, Fabio T. M. Ong, Choon Nam Ng, Mah Lee Lim, Chwee Teck Nosten, Francois Rénia, Laurent Russell, Bruce PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: The transition from enucleated reticulocytes to mature normocytes is marked by substantial remodeling of the erythrocytic cytoplasm and membrane. Despite conspicuous changes, most studies describe the maturing reticulocyte as a homogenous erythropoietic cell type. While reticulocyte staging based on fluorescent RNA stains such as thiazole orange have been useful in a clinical setting; these ‘sub-vital’ stains may confound delicate studies on reticulocyte biology and may preclude their use in heamoparasite invasion studies. DESIGN AND METHODS: Here we use highly purified populations of reticulocytes isolated from cord blood, sorted by flow cytometry into four sequential subpopulations based on transferrin receptor (CD71) expression: CD71high, CD71medium, CD71low and CD71negative. Each of these subgroups was phenotyped in terms of their, morphology, membrane antigens, biomechanical properties and metabolomic profile. RESULTS: Superficially CD71high and CD71medium reticulocytes share a similar gross morphology (large and multilobular) when compared to the smaller, smooth and increasingly concave reticulocytes as seen in the in the CD71low and CD71negativesamples. However, between each of the four sample sets we observe significant decreases in shear modulus, cytoadhesive capacity, erythroid receptor expression (CD44, CD55, CD147, CD235R, and CD242) and metabolite concentrations. Interestingly increasing amounts of boric acid was found in the mature reticulocytes. CONCLUSIONS: Reticulocyte maturation is a dynamic and continuous process, confounding efforts to rigidly classify them. Certainly this study does not offer an alternative classification strategy; instead we used a nondestructive sampling method to examine key phenotypic changes of in reticulocytes. Our study emphasizes a need to focus greater attention on reticulocyte biology. Public Library of Science 2013-10-08 /pmc/articles/PMC3793000/ /pubmed/24116088 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0076062 Text en © 2013 Malleret et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Malleret, Benoît
Xu, Fenggao
Mohandas, Narla
Suwanarusk, Rossarin
Chu, Cindy
Leite, Juliana A.
Low, Kayen
Turner, Claudia
Sriprawat, Kanlaya
Zhang, Rou
Bertrand, Olivier
Colin, Yves
Costa, Fabio T. M.
Ong, Choon Nam
Ng, Mah Lee
Lim, Chwee Teck
Nosten, Francois
Rénia, Laurent
Russell, Bruce
Significant Biochemical, Biophysical and Metabolic Diversity in Circulating Human Cord Blood Reticulocytes
title Significant Biochemical, Biophysical and Metabolic Diversity in Circulating Human Cord Blood Reticulocytes
title_full Significant Biochemical, Biophysical and Metabolic Diversity in Circulating Human Cord Blood Reticulocytes
title_fullStr Significant Biochemical, Biophysical and Metabolic Diversity in Circulating Human Cord Blood Reticulocytes
title_full_unstemmed Significant Biochemical, Biophysical and Metabolic Diversity in Circulating Human Cord Blood Reticulocytes
title_short Significant Biochemical, Biophysical and Metabolic Diversity in Circulating Human Cord Blood Reticulocytes
title_sort significant biochemical, biophysical and metabolic diversity in circulating human cord blood reticulocytes
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3793000/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24116088
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0076062
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