We have developed an immunochemical method for labeling human red blood cells in suspension with hemoglobin-specific antibodies. A membrane permeable cross-linking reagent, dimethyl suberimidate, is used to covalently bind, in situ, a fraction of the intracellular hemoglobin to integral membrane proteins. Hypotonic lysis and washing of the cells removes the unbound hemoglobin resulting in red blood cell ghosts which are permeable to macromolecules. Fluorescein-labeled antibodies for the hemoglobin variants S and C bind specifically to hemoglobin AS and AC ghosts, respectively, and not to normal hemoglobin AA ghosts. This technique can be used to prepare ghost suspensions for cell sorter analysis in which large numbers (10(9)--10(10)) of normal ghosts can be rapidly screened for the presence of rare anti-hemoglobin S and anti-hemoglobin C binding ghosts. In reconstruction experiments using mixtures of AS and AA cells and anti-hemoglobin S, AS ghosts as rare as 3 X 10(-5) were quantitatively recovered. Fluorescence artifacts prevented direct enumeration of AS ghosts at lower frequencies, but a two-step flow sorting-fluorescence microscope visual scanning procedure allows semiquantitative detection of anti-hemoglobin S-labeled ghosts as low as 10(--7). This method can be used for rapidly screening blood samples from individuals of normal hemoglobin A genotype for the presence of rare anti-hemoglobin S and anti-hemoglobin C binding ghosts.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0022-1759(81)90206-4DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

ghosts
9
cell sorter
8
red blood
8
hemoglobin ghosts
8
normal hemoglobin
8
presence rare
8
rare anti-hemoglobin
8
anti-hemoglobin anti-hemoglobin
8
anti-hemoglobin binding
8
binding ghosts
8

Similar Publications

In a novel, on-road study, using a 'Ghost Driver' to emulate an automated vehicle (AV), we captured over 10 hours of video (n = 520) and 64 survey responses documenting the behaviour and attitudes of pedestrians in response to the AV. Three prototype external human-machine interfaces (eHMIs) described the AV's behaviour, awareness and intention using elements of anthropomorphism: High (human face), Low (car motif), Abstract (partial representation of human features that lacked precise visual reference); these were evaluated against a (no eHMI) baseline. Despite many pedestrians reporting that they still relied on vehicular cues to negotiate their crossing, there was a desire/expectation expressed for explicit communication with future AVs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

U-Net and its variants have been widely used in the field of image segmentation. In this paper, a lightweight multi-scale Ghost U-Net (MSGU-Net) network architecture is proposed. This can efficiently and quickly process image segmentation tasks while generating high-quality object masks for each object.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Acute pancreatitis with panniculitis: a rare and striking clinical presentation.

Rev Esp Enferm Dig

January 2025

Gastroenterology, Unidade de Saúde Local do Algarve-Unidade de Faro, Portugal .

Pancreatic panniculitis is a rare dermatological manifestation of pancreatic disorders, characterized by painful, erythematous nodules. We present the case of an 84-year-old woman with acute pancreatitis who developed erythematous-violaceous nodular lesions on her lower limbs. Histopathological examination revealed lobular panniculitis with fat necrosis and ghost adipocytes, confirming the diagnosis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Immediately after invading their chosen host cell, the mature human erythrocyte, malaria parasites begin to export an array of proteins to this compartment, where they initiate processes that are prerequisite for parasite survival and propagation, including nutrient import and immune evasion. One consequence of these activities is the emergence of novel adhesive phenotypes that can lead directly to pathology in the human host. To identify parasite proteins involved in this process, we used modern genetic tools to target genes encoding 15 exported parasite proteins, selected by an in silico workflow.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Screening for transcriptomic associations with Swine Inflammation and Necrosis Syndrome.

BMC Vet Res

January 2025

Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, Clinic for Swine, Justus-Liebig-University, Frankfurter Strasse 112, D-35392, Giessen, Germany.

Background: The recently identified swine inflammation and necrosis syndrome (SINS) affects tail, ears, teats, coronary bands, claws and heels of affected individuals. The primarily endogenous syndrome is based on vasculitis, thrombosis, and intimal proliferation, involving defence cells, interleukins, chemokines, and acute phase proteins and accompanied by alterations in clinical chemistry, metabolome, and liver transcriptome. The complexity of metabolic alterations and the influence of the boar led to hypothesize a polygenic architecture of SINS.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

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!