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Carbonyl Stress in Red Blood Cells and Hemoglobin

期刊

ANTIOXIDANTS
卷 10, 期 2, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/antiox10020253

关键词

red blood cells; hemoglobin; reactive carbonyl compounds; reactive oxygen species; methylglyoxal; glycation; glycolytic enzymes

资金

  1. Russian Foundation for Basic Research [19-2912052]
  2. Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This paper discusses the susceptibility of nucleus-free mammal red blood cells (RBCs) to reactive carbonyl compounds (RCC) and the potential health issues that may arise from exposure to these compounds.
The paper overviews the peculiarities of carbonyl stress in nucleus-free mammal red blood cells (RBCs). Some functional features of RBCs make them exceptionally susceptible to reactive carbonyl compounds (RCC) from both blood plasma and the intracellular environment. In the first case, these compounds arise from the increased concentrations of glucose or ketone bodies in blood plasma, and in the second-from a misbalance in the glycolysis regulation. RBCs are normally exposed to RCC-methylglyoxal (MG), triglycerides-in blood plasma of diabetes patients. MG modifies lipoproteins and membrane proteins of RBCs and endothelial cells both on its own and with reactive oxygen species (ROS). Together, these phenomena may lead to arterial hypertension, atherosclerosis, hemolytic anemia, vascular occlusion, local ischemia, and hypercoagulation phenotype formation. ROS, reactive nitrogen species (RNS), and RCC might also damage hemoglobin (Hb), the most common protein in the RBC cytoplasm. It was Hb with which non-enzymatic glycation was first shown in living systems under physiological conditions. Glycated HbA1c is used as a very reliable and useful diagnostic marker. Studying the impacts of MG, ROS, and RNS on the physiological state of RBCs and Hb is of undisputed importance for basic and applied science.

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