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Calcium/protein kinase C signaling mechanisms in shear-induced mechanical responses of red blood cells.
Microvasc Res. 2021 05; 135:104124.MR

Abstract

Red blood cell (RBC) deformability has vital importance for microcirculation in the body, as RBCs travel in narrow capillaries under shear stress. Deformability can be defined as a remarkable cell ability to change shape in response to an external force which allows the cell to pass through the narrowest blood capillaries. Previous studies showed that RBC deformability could be regulated by Ca2+/protein kinase C (PKC) signaling mechanisms due to the phosphorylative changes in RBC membrane proteins by kinases and phosphatases. We investigated the roles of Ca2+/PKC signaling pathway on RBC mechanical responses and impaired RBC deformability under continuous shear stress (SS). A protein kinase C inhibitor Chelerythrine, a tyrosine phosphatase inhibitor Calpeptin, and a calcium channel blocker Verapamil were applied into human blood samples in 1 micromolar concentration. Samples with drugs were treated with or without 3 mM Ca2+. A shear stress at 5 Pa level was applied to each sample continuously for 300 s. RBC deformability was measured by a laser-assisted optical rotational cell analyzer (LORRCA) and was calculated as the change in elongation index (EI) of RBC upon a range of shear stress (SS, 0.3-50 Pa). RBC mechanical stress responses were evaluated before and after continuous SS through the parameterization of EI-SS curves. The drug administrations did not produce any significant alterations in RBC mechanical responses when they were applied alone. However, the application of the drugs together with Ca2+ substantially increased RBC deformability compared to calcium alone. Verapamil significantly improved Ca2+-induced impairments of deformability both before and after 5 Pa SS exposure (p < 0.0001). Calpeptin and Chelerythrine significantly ameliorated impaired deformability only after continuous SS (p < 0.05). Shear-induced improvements of deformability were conserved by the drug administrations although shear-induced deformability was impaired when the drugs were applied with calcium. The blocking of Ca2+ channel by Verapamil improved impaired RBC mechanical responses independent of the SS effect. The inhibition of tyrosine phosphatase and protein kinase C by Calpeptin and Chelerythrine, respectively, exhibited ameliorating effects on calcium-impaired deformability with the contribution of shear stress. The modulation of Ca2+/PKC signaling pathway could regulate the mechanical stress responses of RBCs when cells are under continuous SS exposure. Shear-induced improvements in the mechanical properties of RBCs by this signaling mechanism could facilitate RBC flow in the microcirculation of pathophysiological disorders, wherein Ca2+ homeostasis is disturbed and RBC deformability is reduced.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Physiology, School of Medicine, Koç University, Istanbul, Turkey; Research Center for Translational Medicine (KUTTAM), Koç University, Istanbul, Turkey.School of Medicine, Koç University, Istanbul, Turkey.School of Medicine, Koç University, Istanbul, Turkey.Department of Physiology, School of Medicine, Koç University, Istanbul, Turkey; Research Center for Translational Medicine (KUTTAM), Koç University, Istanbul, Turkey.Department of Physiology, School of Medicine, Koç University, Istanbul, Turkey; Research Center for Translational Medicine (KUTTAM), Koç University, Istanbul, Turkey.Department of Physiology, School of Medicine, Koç University, Istanbul, Turkey; Research Center for Translational Medicine (KUTTAM), Koç University, Istanbul, Turkey; School of Medicine, Koç University, Istanbul, Turkey. Electronic address: ozlemyalcin@ku.edu.tr.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

33359148

Citation

Ugurel, Elif, et al. "Calcium/protein Kinase C Signaling Mechanisms in Shear-induced Mechanical Responses of Red Blood Cells." Microvascular Research, vol. 135, 2021, p. 104124.
Ugurel E, Kisakurek ZB, Aksu Y, et al. Calcium/protein kinase C signaling mechanisms in shear-induced mechanical responses of red blood cells. Microvasc Res. 2021;135:104124.
Ugurel, E., Kisakurek, Z. B., Aksu, Y., Goksel, E., Cilek, N., & Yalcin, O. (2021). Calcium/protein kinase C signaling mechanisms in shear-induced mechanical responses of red blood cells. Microvascular Research, 135, 104124. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mvr.2020.104124
Ugurel E, et al. Calcium/protein Kinase C Signaling Mechanisms in Shear-induced Mechanical Responses of Red Blood Cells. Microvasc Res. 2021;135:104124. PubMed PMID: 33359148.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Calcium/protein kinase C signaling mechanisms in shear-induced mechanical responses of red blood cells. AU - Ugurel,Elif, AU - Kisakurek,Zeynep Busra, AU - Aksu,Yasemin, AU - Goksel,Evrim, AU - Cilek,Neslihan, AU - Yalcin,Ozlem, Y1 - 2021/01/14/ PY - 2020/06/18/received PY - 2020/12/15/revised PY - 2020/12/15/accepted PY - 2020/12/29/pubmed PY - 2021/7/30/medline PY - 2020/12/28/entrez KW - Calcium homeostasis KW - Mechanical responses KW - Protein kinase C signaling KW - Red blood cells KW - Shear stress SP - 104124 EP - 104124 JF - Microvascular research JO - Microvasc Res VL - 135 N2 - Red blood cell (RBC) deformability has vital importance for microcirculation in the body, as RBCs travel in narrow capillaries under shear stress. Deformability can be defined as a remarkable cell ability to change shape in response to an external force which allows the cell to pass through the narrowest blood capillaries. Previous studies showed that RBC deformability could be regulated by Ca2+/protein kinase C (PKC) signaling mechanisms due to the phosphorylative changes in RBC membrane proteins by kinases and phosphatases. We investigated the roles of Ca2+/PKC signaling pathway on RBC mechanical responses and impaired RBC deformability under continuous shear stress (SS). A protein kinase C inhibitor Chelerythrine, a tyrosine phosphatase inhibitor Calpeptin, and a calcium channel blocker Verapamil were applied into human blood samples in 1 micromolar concentration. Samples with drugs were treated with or without 3 mM Ca2+. A shear stress at 5 Pa level was applied to each sample continuously for 300 s. RBC deformability was measured by a laser-assisted optical rotational cell analyzer (LORRCA) and was calculated as the change in elongation index (EI) of RBC upon a range of shear stress (SS, 0.3-50 Pa). RBC mechanical stress responses were evaluated before and after continuous SS through the parameterization of EI-SS curves. The drug administrations did not produce any significant alterations in RBC mechanical responses when they were applied alone. However, the application of the drugs together with Ca2+ substantially increased RBC deformability compared to calcium alone. Verapamil significantly improved Ca2+-induced impairments of deformability both before and after 5 Pa SS exposure (p < 0.0001). Calpeptin and Chelerythrine significantly ameliorated impaired deformability only after continuous SS (p < 0.05). Shear-induced improvements of deformability were conserved by the drug administrations although shear-induced deformability was impaired when the drugs were applied with calcium. The blocking of Ca2+ channel by Verapamil improved impaired RBC mechanical responses independent of the SS effect. The inhibition of tyrosine phosphatase and protein kinase C by Calpeptin and Chelerythrine, respectively, exhibited ameliorating effects on calcium-impaired deformability with the contribution of shear stress. The modulation of Ca2+/PKC signaling pathway could regulate the mechanical stress responses of RBCs when cells are under continuous SS exposure. Shear-induced improvements in the mechanical properties of RBCs by this signaling mechanism could facilitate RBC flow in the microcirculation of pathophysiological disorders, wherein Ca2+ homeostasis is disturbed and RBC deformability is reduced. SN - 1095-9319 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/33359148/Calcium/protein_kinase_C_signaling_mechanisms_in_shear_induced_mechanical_responses_of_red_blood_cells_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -