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research article

Red blood cells ageing markers: a multi-parametric analysis

Bardyn, Manon
•
Rappaz, Benjamin  
•
Jaferzadeh, Keyvan
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2017
Blood Transfusion

Background. Red blood cells collected in citrate-phosphate-dextrose can be stored for up to 42 days at 4 degrees C in saline-adenine-glucose-mannitol additive solution. During this controlled, but nevertheless artificial, ex vivo ageing, red blood cells accumulate lesions that can be reversible or irreversible upon transfusion. The aim of the present study is to follow several parameters reflecting cell metabolism, antioxidant defences, morphology and membrane dynamics during storage. Materials and methods. Five erythrocyte concentrates were followed weekly during 71 days. Extracellular glucose and lactate concentrations, total antioxidant power, as well as reduced and oxidised intracellular glutathione levels were quantified. Microvesiculation, percentage of haemolysis and haematologic parameters were also evaluated. Finally, morphological changes and membrane fluctuations were recorded using label-free digital holographic microscopy. Results. The antioxidant power as well as the intracellular glutathione concentration first increased, reaching maximal values after one and two weeks, respectively. Irreversible morphological lesions appeared during week 5, where discocytes began to transform into transient echinocytes and finally spherocytes. At the same time, the microvesiculation and haemolysis started to rise exponentially. After six weeks (expiration date), intracellular glutathione was reduced by 25%, reflecting increasing oxidative stress. The membrane fluctuations showed decreased amplitudes during shape transition from discocytes to spherocytes. Discussion. Various types of lesions accumulated at different chemical and cellular levels during storage, which could impact their in vivo recovery after transfusion. A marked effect was observed after four weeks of storage, which corroborates recent clinical data. The prolonged follow-up period allowed the capture of deep storage lesions. Interestingly, and as previously described, the severity of the changes differed among donors.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.2450/2017.0318-16
Web of Science ID

WOS:000400682100008

Author(s)
Bardyn, Manon
•
Rappaz, Benjamin  
•
Jaferzadeh, Keyvan
•
Crettaz, David
•
Tissot, Jean-Daniel
•
Moon, Inkyu
•
Turcatti, Gerardo  
•
Lion, Niels
•
Prudent, Michel
Date Issued

2017

Publisher

Simti Servizi Srl

Published in
Blood Transfusion
Volume

15

Issue

3

Start page

239

End page

S2

Subjects

red blood cell

storage lesion

membrane fluctuation

digital holographic m...

antioxidant

Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
PTCB  
Available on Infoscience
May 30, 2017
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/137832
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