Dipole relaxation in erythrocyte membrane: involvement of spectrin skeleton.

Bioelectrochemistry

Dept. of Physics, Biophysics, Roentgenology and Radiology, Medical Faculty, Thracian University, Stara Zagora 6000, Bulgaria.

Published: December 2012

Polarization of spectrin-actin undermembrane skeleton of red blood cell (RBC) plasma membranes was studied by impedance spectroscopy. Relatedly, dielectric spectra of suspensions that contained RBCs of humans, mammals (bovine, horse, dog, cat) and birds (turkey, pigeon, duck), and human RBC ghost membranes were continuously obtained during heating from 20 to 70°C. Data for the complex admittance and capacitance were used to derive the suspension resistance, R, and capacitance, C, as well as the energy loss as a function of temperature. As in previous studies, two irreversible temperature-induced transitions in the human RBC plasma membrane were detected at 49.5°C and at 60.7°C (at low heating rate). The transition at 49.5°C was evident from the abrupt changes in R, and C and the fall in the energy loss, due to dipole relaxation. For the erythrocytes of indicated species the changes in R and C displayed remarkable and similar frequency profiles within the 0.05-13MHz domain. These changes were subdued after cross-linking of membranes by diamide (0.3-1.3mM) and glutaraldehyde (0.1-0.4%) and at the presence of glycerol (10%). Based on the above results and previous reports, the dielectric changes at 49.5°C were related to dipole relaxation and segmental mobility of spectrin cytoskeleton. The results open the possibility for selective dielectric thermolysis of cell cytoskeleton.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bioelechem.2012.03.005DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

dipole relaxation
12
rbc plasma
8
human rbc
8
energy loss
8
relaxation erythrocyte
4
erythrocyte membrane
4
membrane involvement
4
involvement spectrin
4
spectrin skeleton
4
skeleton polarization
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!