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Hemolysis and Metabolic Lesion of G6PD Deficient RBCs in Response to Dapsone Hydroxylamine in a Humanized Mouse Model.

Karolina H Dziewulska-CronkJulie A ReiszAriel M HayAngelo D'AlessandroJames C Zimring
Published in: The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics (2023)
Glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency is the most common enzymopathy in humans (~5% of all individuals). G6PD deficiency (G6PDd) is caused by an unstable enzyme and manifests most strongly in red blood cells (RBCs) that cannot synthesize new protein. G6PDd RBCs have decreased ability to mitigate oxidative stress due to lower levels of NADPH, as a result of a defective pentose phosphate pathway. Accordingly, oxidative drugs can result in hemolysis and potentially life-threatening anemia in G6PDd patients. Dapsone is a highly useful drug for treating a variety of pathologies but oral dapsone is contraindicated in patients with G6PDd due to oxidative stress-induced anemia. Dapsone must be metabolized to become hemolytic. Dapsone hydroxylamine (DDS-NOH) has been implicated as the major hemolytic dapsone metabolite, but this has never been tested on G6PDd RBCs with in vivo circulation as a metric. Moreover, the metabolic lesion caused by DDS-NOH is unknown. We report that RBCs from a novel humanized mouse expressing the human Mediterranean G6PD-deficient variant have increased sensitivity to DDS-NOH. In addition, we show that DDS-NOH damaged RBCs can either undergo sequestration (with subsequent return to circulation) or permanent removal in a dose-dependent manner, with G6PD-sufficient RBCs mostly being sequestered, and G6PDd RBCs mostly being permanently removed. Finally, we characterize the metabolic lesion caused by DDS-NOH in G6PDd RBCs and report a blockage in terminal glycolysis resulting in a cellular accumulation of pyruvate. These findings confirm DDS-NOH as a hemolytic metabolite and elucidate metabolic effects of DDS-NOH on G6PDd RBCs. Significance Statement These findings confirm that dapsone hydroxylamine, an active metabolite of dapsone, causes in vivo clearance of murine RBCs expressing a human variant of deficient G6PD, an enzymopathy that affects half a billion individuals (G6PD deficiency). Both cellular mechanisms of clearance (sequestration vs. destruction) and specific metabolic disturbances caused by dapsone hydroxylamine are elucidated, providing novel mechanistic understanding.
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