The Effect of Alcohols on Red Blood Cell Mechanical Properties and Membrane Fluidity Depends on Their Molecular Size

2013
Authors
Sonmez, MeldaInce, Huseyin Yavuz

Yalcin, Ozlem

Ajdzanović, Vladimir Z

Spasojević, Ivan

Meiselman, Herbert J
Baskurt, Oguz K
Article (Published version)
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The role of membrane fluidity in determining red blood cell (RBC) deformability has been suggested by a number of studies. The present investigation evaluated alterations of RBC membrane fluidity, deformability and stability in the presence of four linear alcohols (methanol, ethanol, propanol and butanol) using ektacytometry and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. All alcohols had a biphasic effect on deformability such that it increased then decreased with increasing concentration; the critical concentration for reversal was an inverse function of molecular size. EPR results showed biphasic changes of near-surface fluidity (i.e., increase then decrease) and a decreased fluidity of the lipid core; rank order of effectiveness was butanol > propanol > ethanol > methanol, with a significant correlation between near-surface fluidity and deformability (r = 0.697; p lt 0.01). The presence of alcohol enhanced the impairment of RBC deformability caused by subjecting cells to 10...0 Pa shear stress for 300 s, with significant differences from control being observed at higher concentrations of all four alcohols. The level of hemolysis was dependent on molecular size and concentration, whereas echinocytic shape transformation (i.e., biconcave disc to crenated morphology) was observed only for ethanol and propanol. These results are in accordance with available data obtained on model membranes. They document the presence of mechanical links between RBC deformability and near-surface membrane fluidity, chain length-dependence of the ability of alcohols to alter RBC mechanical behavior, and the biphasic response of RBC deformability and near-surface membrane fluidity to increasing alcohol concentrations.
Keywords:
erythrocytes / rheological properties / membrane fluidity / methanol / ethanolSource:
PLoS One, 2013, 8, 9Publisher:
- Public Library Science, San Francisco
Funding / projects:
- Turkish Academy of Sciences, NIHTurkish Academy of Sciences [HL015722, HL090511]
- NATIONAL HEART, LUNG, AND BLOOD INSTITUTEUnited States Department of Health & Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health (NIH) - USANIH National Heart Lung & Blood Institute (NHLBI) [R37HL015722, U54HL090511, R01HL015722] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER
- The effects of select plant extracts, phytoestrogens, steroid and peptide hormones on the rat neuroendocrine system (RS-173009)
- Molecular mechanisms of redox signalling in homeostasis: adaptation and pathology (RS-173014)
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0076579
ISSN: 1932-6203
PubMed: 24086751
WoS: 000326520200139
Scopus: 2-s2.0-84884517287
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Institut za multidisciplinarna istraživanjaTY - JOUR AU - Sonmez, Melda AU - Ince, Huseyin Yavuz AU - Yalcin, Ozlem AU - Ajdzanović, Vladimir Z AU - Spasojević, Ivan AU - Meiselman, Herbert J AU - Baskurt, Oguz K PY - 2013 UR - http://rimsi.imsi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/726 AB - The role of membrane fluidity in determining red blood cell (RBC) deformability has been suggested by a number of studies. The present investigation evaluated alterations of RBC membrane fluidity, deformability and stability in the presence of four linear alcohols (methanol, ethanol, propanol and butanol) using ektacytometry and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. All alcohols had a biphasic effect on deformability such that it increased then decreased with increasing concentration; the critical concentration for reversal was an inverse function of molecular size. EPR results showed biphasic changes of near-surface fluidity (i.e., increase then decrease) and a decreased fluidity of the lipid core; rank order of effectiveness was butanol > propanol > ethanol > methanol, with a significant correlation between near-surface fluidity and deformability (r = 0.697; p lt 0.01). The presence of alcohol enhanced the impairment of RBC deformability caused by subjecting cells to 100 Pa shear stress for 300 s, with significant differences from control being observed at higher concentrations of all four alcohols. The level of hemolysis was dependent on molecular size and concentration, whereas echinocytic shape transformation (i.e., biconcave disc to crenated morphology) was observed only for ethanol and propanol. These results are in accordance with available data obtained on model membranes. They document the presence of mechanical links between RBC deformability and near-surface membrane fluidity, chain length-dependence of the ability of alcohols to alter RBC mechanical behavior, and the biphasic response of RBC deformability and near-surface membrane fluidity to increasing alcohol concentrations. PB - Public Library Science, San Francisco T2 - PLoS One T1 - The Effect of Alcohols on Red Blood Cell Mechanical Properties and Membrane Fluidity Depends on Their Molecular Size IS - 9 VL - 8 DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0076579 ER -
@article{ author = "Sonmez, Melda and Ince, Huseyin Yavuz and Yalcin, Ozlem and Ajdzanović, Vladimir Z and Spasojević, Ivan and Meiselman, Herbert J and Baskurt, Oguz K", year = "2013", abstract = "The role of membrane fluidity in determining red blood cell (RBC) deformability has been suggested by a number of studies. The present investigation evaluated alterations of RBC membrane fluidity, deformability and stability in the presence of four linear alcohols (methanol, ethanol, propanol and butanol) using ektacytometry and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. All alcohols had a biphasic effect on deformability such that it increased then decreased with increasing concentration; the critical concentration for reversal was an inverse function of molecular size. EPR results showed biphasic changes of near-surface fluidity (i.e., increase then decrease) and a decreased fluidity of the lipid core; rank order of effectiveness was butanol > propanol > ethanol > methanol, with a significant correlation between near-surface fluidity and deformability (r = 0.697; p lt 0.01). The presence of alcohol enhanced the impairment of RBC deformability caused by subjecting cells to 100 Pa shear stress for 300 s, with significant differences from control being observed at higher concentrations of all four alcohols. The level of hemolysis was dependent on molecular size and concentration, whereas echinocytic shape transformation (i.e., biconcave disc to crenated morphology) was observed only for ethanol and propanol. These results are in accordance with available data obtained on model membranes. They document the presence of mechanical links between RBC deformability and near-surface membrane fluidity, chain length-dependence of the ability of alcohols to alter RBC mechanical behavior, and the biphasic response of RBC deformability and near-surface membrane fluidity to increasing alcohol concentrations.", publisher = "Public Library Science, San Francisco", journal = "PLoS One", title = "The Effect of Alcohols on Red Blood Cell Mechanical Properties and Membrane Fluidity Depends on Their Molecular Size", number = "9", volume = "8", doi = "10.1371/journal.pone.0076579" }
Sonmez, M., Ince, H. Y., Yalcin, O., Ajdzanović, V. Z., Spasojević, I., Meiselman, H. J.,& Baskurt, O. K.. (2013). The Effect of Alcohols on Red Blood Cell Mechanical Properties and Membrane Fluidity Depends on Their Molecular Size. in PLoS One Public Library Science, San Francisco., 8(9). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0076579
Sonmez M, Ince HY, Yalcin O, Ajdzanović VZ, Spasojević I, Meiselman HJ, Baskurt OK. The Effect of Alcohols on Red Blood Cell Mechanical Properties and Membrane Fluidity Depends on Their Molecular Size. in PLoS One. 2013;8(9). doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0076579 .
Sonmez, Melda, Ince, Huseyin Yavuz, Yalcin, Ozlem, Ajdzanović, Vladimir Z, Spasojević, Ivan, Meiselman, Herbert J, Baskurt, Oguz K, "The Effect of Alcohols on Red Blood Cell Mechanical Properties and Membrane Fluidity Depends on Their Molecular Size" in PLoS One, 8, no. 9 (2013), https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0076579 . .