3.8 Article

Multimodal imaging reveals membrane skeleton reorganisation during reticulocyte maturation and differences in dimple and rim regions of mature erythrocytes

Journal

JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY-X
Volume 6, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.yjsbx.2021.100056

Keywords

Reticulocyte; Erythrocyte; Membrane skeleton; Shape memory; SEM; AFM

Funding

  1. BDMI Cord Blood Bank [FL150100106]
  2. University of Melbourne [208693/Z/17/Z]
  3. Howard Hughes Medical Institute-Wellcome Trust International Research Scholar [GNT1143187, GNT1160042, GNT1098992]
  4. National Health and Med-ical Research Council of Australia [FL150100106]
  5. National Health and Medical Research Council
  6. UoM ECR Grant
  7. Australian Research Council Laureate Fellow [FL150100106]
  8. Hughes Medical Institute-Wellcome Trust International Research Scholar [208693/Z/17/Z]
  9. National Health and Med-ical Research Council of Australia [FL150100106, GNT1143187, GNT1160042]
  10. National Health and Medical Research Council [208693/Z/17/Z]
  11. UoM ECR Grant
  12. [GNT1154937]
  13. Wellcome Trust [208693/Z/17/Z] Funding Source: Wellcome Trust
  14. Australian Research Council [FL150100106] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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The study demonstrates that as reticulocytes mature into RBCs, there is a decrease in cell surface area and an increase in the density of the spectrin-actin network, along with slight increases in inter-junctional distance and junctional density. Additionally, the edge region of mature RBCs contains more junctional complexes compared to the dimple region, supported by a 2% increase in band 4.1 density.
The red blood cell (RBC) is remarkable in its ability to deform as it passages through the vasculature. Its deformability derives from a spectrin-actin protein network that supports the cell membrane and provides strength and flexibility, however questions remain regarding the assembly and maintenance of the skeletal network. Using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and atomic force microscopy (AFM) we have examined the nanoscale architecture of the cytoplasmic side of membrane discs prepared from reticulocytes and mature RBCs. Immunofluorescence microscopy was used to probe the distribution of spectrin and other membrane skeleton proteins. We found that the cell surface area decreases by up to 30% and the spectrin-actin network increases in density by approximately 20% as the reticulocyte matures. By contrast, the inter-junctional distance and junctional density increase only by 3-4% and 5-9%, respectively. This suggests that the maturation-associated reduction in surface area is accompanied by an increase in spectrin self-association to form higher order oligomers. We also examined the mature RBC membrane in the edge (rim) and face (dimple) regions of mature RBCs and found the rim contains about 1.5% more junctional complexes compared to the dimple region. A 2% increase in band 4.1 density in the rim supports these structural measurements.

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