Metabolic reprogramming under hypoxic storage preserves faster oxygen unloading from stored red blood cells.
Julija RabcukaSlawomir BlonskiAthinoula MeliSamuel O Sowemimo-CokerDamian ZarembaDaniel StephensonMonika DzieciatkowskaDavid NerguizianRebecca CardiganPiotr M KorczykPeter A SmethurstAngelo D'AlessandroPawel SwietachPublished in: Blood advances (2022)
Stored red blood cells (RBCs) incur biochemical and morphological changes, collectively termed the storage lesion. Functionally, the storage lesion manifests as slower oxygen unloading from RBCs, which may compromise the efficacy of transfusions where the clinical imperative is to rapidly boost oxygen delivery to tissues. Recent analysis of large real-world data linked longer storage with increased recipient mortality. Biochemical rejuvenation with a formulation of adenosine, inosine, and pyruvate can restore gas-handling properties, but its implementation is impractical for most clinical scenarios. We tested whether storage under hypoxia, previously shown to slow biochemical degradation, also preserves gas-handling properties of RBCs. A microfluidic chamber, designed to rapidly switch between oxygenated and anoxic superfusates, was used for single-cell oxygen saturation imaging on samples stored for up to 49 days. Aliquots were also analyzed flow cytometrically for side-scatter (a proposed proxy of O2 unloading kinetics), metabolomics, lipidomics, and redox proteomics. For benchmarking, units were biochemically rejuvenated at 4 weeks of standard storage. Hypoxic storage hastened O2 unloading in units stored to 35 days, an effect that correlated with side-scatter but was not linked to posttranslational modifications of hemoglobin. Although hypoxic storage and rejuvenation produced distinct biochemical changes, a subset of metabolites including pyruvate, sedoheptulose 1-phosphate, and 2/3 phospho-d-glycerate, was a common signature that correlated with changes in O2 unloading. Correlations between gas handling and lipidomic changes were modest. Thus, hypoxic storage of RBCs preserves key metabolic pathways and O2 exchange properties, thereby improving the functional quality of blood products and potentially influencing transfusion outcomes.
Keyphrases
- red blood cell
- room temperature
- single cell
- mass spectrometry
- high resolution
- gene expression
- primary care
- machine learning
- climate change
- metabolic syndrome
- rna seq
- drug delivery
- ms ms
- cardiac surgery
- adipose tissue
- electronic health record
- carbon dioxide
- gestational age
- data analysis
- platelet rich plasma
- glycemic control