Infection is a leading cause of neonatal morbidity and mortality worldwide. Premature neonates are particularly susceptible to infection because of physiologic immaturity, comorbidity, and extraneous medical interventions. Additionally premature infants are at higher risk of progression to sepsis or severe sepsis, adverse outcomes, and antimicrobial toxicity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFour different immunoassay and antibody microarray methods performed at four different sites were used to measure the levels of a broad range of proteins (N = 323 assays; 39, 88, 168, and 28 assays at the respective sites; 237 unique analytes) in the human serum and plasma reference specimens distributed by the Plasma Proteome Project (PPP) of the HUPO. The methods provided a means to (1) assess the level of systematic variation in protein abundances associated with blood preparation methods (serum, citrate-anticoagulated-plasma, EDTA-anticoagulated-plasma, or heparin-anticoagulated-plasma) and (2) evaluate the dependence on concentration of MS-based protein identifications from data sets using the HUPO specimens. Some proteins, particularly cytokines, had highly variable concentrations between the different sample preparations, suggesting specific effects of certain anticoagulants on the stability or availability of these proteins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Quantitative proteomics is an emerging field that encompasses multiplexed measurement of many known proteins in groups of experimental samples in order to identify differences between groups. Antibody arrays are a novel technology that is increasingly being used for quantitative proteomics studies due to highly multiplexed content, scalability, matrix flexibility and economy of sample consumption. Key applications of antibody arrays in quantitative proteomics studies are identification of novel diagnostic assays, biomarker discovery in trials of new drugs, and validation of qualitative proteomics discoveries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlatelet activation is reported to correlate with acute coronary syndromes. A platelet analysis method on the ADVIA 120 Hematology System provides rapid analysis of platelet density, reported as mean platelet component (MPC) concentration, utilizes routine hematology specimens, requires no pre-treatment, and thirty seconds to generate results. Sub-populations of platelets separated by density gradients showed excellent correlation with the ADVIA 120 MPC parameter (r = 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSpherocytic red cells with reduced membrane surface area are a feature of hereditary spherocytosis (HS) and some forms of autoimmune hemolytic anemia (AIHA). It is generally assumed that membrane loss in spherocytic red cells occurs during their sojourn in circulation. The structural basis for membrane loss in HS is improper assembly of membrane proteins, whereas in AIHA it is due to partial phagocytosis of circulating red cells by macrophages.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe describe a population of sickle cell anemia red cells (SS RBCs) ( approximately 4%) and a smaller fraction of normal RBCs (<0.03%) that fail to dehydrate when permeabilized to K(+) with either valinomycin or elevated internal Ca(2+). The nonshrinking, valinomycin-resistant (val-res) fractions, first detected by flow cytometry of density-fractionated SS RBCs, constituted up to 60% of the lightest, reticulocyte-rich (R1) cell fraction, and progressively smaller portions of the slightly denser R2 cells and discocytes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSickle cell disease is a hereditary disorder characterized by erythrocyte deformity due to hemoglobin polymerization. We assessed in vivo the potential curative threshold of fetal hemoglobin in the SAD transgenic mouse model of sickle cell disease using mating with mice expressing the human fetal Agamma-globin gene. With increasing levels of HbF, AgammaSAD mice showed considerable improvement in all hematologic parameters, morphopathologic features and life span/survival.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTraditional reticulocyte counts provide only a partial estimate of the erythropoietic bone marrow activity and do not account for qualitative variations of reticulocyte cellular indexes and hemoglobin content in particular. We have studied a new integrated parameter, reticulocyte hemoglobin (retHb), that quantifies in grams per liter the hemoglobin contained in the circulating reticulocyte compartment and is obtained by multiplying the absolute reticulocyte count and the reticulocyte cell hemoglobin content. In 50 normal control subjects, retHb values were 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUsing flow cytometry and osmotic lysis measurements, we document here the means and coefficients of variation of the following red cell (RBC) properties: hemoglobin (Hb) content, volume, Hb concentration, and relative lytic tonicity distributions in populations of normal human RBCs, before and after density fractionation. The distributions showed a pattern characterized by much larger coefficients of variation of the Hb content and volume distributions than of the Hb concentration and relative lytic tonicity distributions. From analysis of the factors that determine those RBC properties, the patterns were interpreted as reflecting previously unrecognized statistical proportionalities between cell osmolyte content, Hb content, and membrane area.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFErythrocyte sickling on deoxygenation in vitro occurs in transgenic SAD mice, hemizygous for a modified human sickle hemoglobin, HbSAD [alpha 2 beta 2S(beta 6val)Antilles (beta 23 lle)D- Punjab (beta 121Gln)] (SAD-1, 19% HbSAD; beta-thal/SAD-1, 26% HbSAD). The present study examines the cellular defects in vivo and pathologic changes observed in SAD-1 mice at atmospheric oxygenation as well as the effect of acute hypoxia. The transgenic mice showed generalized congestion and microvascular occlusions, occasionally with thrombosis and infarctions of lung, kidneys, penis, and myocardium.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStudies on normal human reticulocytes have been limited by a lack of methods for effective reticulocyte enrichment. This study shows a convenient new approach for selective enrichment of reticulocytes from normal blood samples. We have developed a modified arabinogalactan density gradient that contains high potassium levels, approximating the internal cation composition of red blood cells (RBC).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochim Biophys Acta
July 1991
To provide further understanding of how oxidative damage affects red cell membrane function, the effects of low levels of two different types of oxidants on selected red cell properties have been studied. Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), an example of a water soluble oxidant, and t-butylhydroperoxide (tBHP), a hydrophobic hydroperoxide, were compared with respect to their effects on membrane permeability, membrane mechanical properties and binding of autologous serum antibodies to the cell surface. Whereas H2O2 treatment resulted in a dose-dependent increase in membrane permeability to potassium that was evident after one hour of oxidant exposure, cells treated with tBHP at doses up to 5 mumol/ml cells showed no immediate change in cation permeability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA fundamental difficulty in the study of red cell senescence has been that of isolating a population of cells that have been aged in vivo. It has been proposed that the induction of Heinz body formation through the use of oxidizing agents, including phenylhydrazine, can provide a model for elucidating mechanisms of normal red cell aging. In an effort to evaluate the applicability of this model, we examined the nature of autologous antibody binding to phenylhydrazine-treated cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study examines the quantitative relationship between two natural serum antibodies, anti-band 3 and anti-alpha-galactosyl (anti-Gal), in their capacity to bind to human red blood cell (RBC) populations separated on density gradients. The question was approached in two ways. First, we determined the extent of rebinding of affinity-purified human serum antibodies to RBCs that had been stripped of in situ antibody.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn an effort to study the rheologic effects of small amounts of hemoglobin S (HbS) polymer in sickle red cells, we have used the ektacytometer, a laser diffraction couette viscometer, to measure sickle cell deformability as a function of oxygen tension. Sickle cell populations of defined intracellular hemoglobin concentration (MCHC) were isolated using Stractan density gradients and were resuspended in buffered polyvinylpyrrolidone solutions for deformability measurements. Using a gas-porous, hollow fiber gas exchange system to establish a linear gradient in oxygen tension, deformability was measured over a pO2 range of 76 to 0 mm Hg.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA low molecular weight iron-binding substance that promotes bacterial growth in vitro by increasing iron availability was identified in human blood and urine. Partial purification and physical characterization indicate that this factor is similar to the host-associated iron transfer factor (HAITF) previously isolated from mammalian tissue. HAITF was found to be significantly elevated in the blood of patients with thalassemia who have transfusional siderosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDeoxygenated sickle erythrocytes in static suspension align perpendicular to a magnetic field. To assess the importance of this observation to MRI of sickle-cell disease, an in vitro flow apparatus was devised and the orientation of sickle erythrocytes flowing through a 0.38 T magnetic field was investigated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF