One of the most common life-saving medical procedures is a red blood cell (RBC) transfusion. Unfortunately, RBCs for transfusion have a limited shelf life after donation due to detrimental storage effects on their morphological and biochemical properties. Inspired by nature, a biomimetics approach was developed to preserve RBCs for long-term storage using compounds found in animals with a natural propensity to survive in a frozen or desiccated state for decades.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDespite recent advances in biostabilization, clinical blood supplies still experience shortages and storage limitations for red blood cells (RBCs) have not yet been sufficiently addressed. Storing RBCs in a frozen or dried state is an appealing solution to address storage limitations, but many promising cryoprotectants, including the non-reducing sugar trehalose, are impermeant to mammalian cell membranes and cannot be utilized effectively using currently available compound-loading methods. We found that transient pore formation induced by ultrasound and microbubbles (sonoporation) offers an effective means of loading trehalose into RBCs to facilitate long-term storage in a frozen or desiccated state.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPreservation of erythrocytes in a desiccated state for storage at ambient temperature could simplify blood transfusions in austere environments, such as rural clinics, far-forward military operations, and during space travel. Currently, storage of erythrocytes is limited by a short shelf-life of 42 days at 4 °C, and long-term preservation requires a complex process that involves the addition and removal of glycerol from erythrocytes before and after storage at -80 °C, respectively. Natural compounds, such as trehalose, can protect cells in a desiccated state if they are present at sufficient levels inside the cell, but mammalian cell membranes lack transporters for this compound.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLate embryogenesis abundant (LEA) proteins are found in desiccation-tolerant species from all domains of life. Despite several decades of investigation, the molecular mechanisms by which LEA proteins confer desiccation tolerance are still unclear. In this study, dielectrophoresis (DEP) was used to determine the electrical properties of (Kc167) cells ectopically expressing LEA proteins from the anhydrobiotic brine shrimp, .
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