Part 9.1: RBCs Flashcards

1
Q

Adult hemoglobin structure (including heme structure)

Fetal hemoglobin structure

A

2 alpha, 2 beta globin chains
- 4 heme groups

Each heme group has 4 pyrrole N structures with iron in the center
- Iron binds O2
- Histidine binds iron from heme to the globin
- heme is a special product not a protein

Fetal hemoglobin has 2 alpha, 2 gamma globin chains
- greater affinity for oxygen than adult
- on sO2 (saturation) vs. pO2 (partial pressure), at 50% saturation fetal hemoglobin has a lower O2 partial pressure

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2
Q

Different forms of hemoglobin

A

Oxy-Hb: oxygen bound to heme
- 95% or higher should be oxy-Hb, below 90% is respiratory distress

Deoxy-Hb: no oxygen bound to heme
- darker maroon red

Carboxy-Hb: CO binds to heme more strongly than O2
- bright cherry red color when bound

Carbamino-Hb: CO2 bound to globin for transport out

NO bound globin: binds globin for transport

Met-Hb: oxidized (Fe3+) hemoglobin
- brown color, requires NADPH to reduced

Fetal Hb: 2 alpha, 2 gamma globin chains
- greater affinity for oxygen than adult

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3
Q

Glucose metabolism in RBC (7 steps)

A

1) Oxy-Hb drops off oxygen at tissues

2) Glucose enters via GLUT1 and glycosylates deoxy-Hb –> HbA1c

3) Glucose –> G6P by hexokinase: >90% of glucose goes towards glycolysis, < 10% to PPP to regeneration NADPH
- NADH produced to reduce Met-Hb
- GSSG –> 2 GSH

4) Pyruvate from glycolysis must be converted to lactate to cross membrane and undergoes Cori cycle and then gluconeogenesis

5) Deoxy-Hb –> Met-Hb by oxidation, Met-Hb –> Deoxy-Hb by NADH

6) 1,3-diphosphoglycerate –> 2,3 diphosphoglycerate influences rate of O2 release from Hb

7) ATP from glycolysis is used to power cell function such as maintaining electrolyte balance

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4
Q

G6PDH Deficiency

A

Normal function of G6PDH: conversion of G6P –> 6-phosphoglucono-lactone, produces NADPH
- Deficiency results in NADPH deficiency

Most common genetic disorder - cross-linked recessive with many possible SNPs

400 million people –> 4000 deaths

Vulnerability: infection/fava beans oxidative stress, Advanced glycation end-products (AGEs), hemolytic anemia, increased bilirubin and jaundice

Heterozygotes are protected against malaria

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5
Q

Iron metabolism cycle

A

1) Fe2+ consumed

2) Converted to Fe3+ in enterocytes and bound by transferrin
- 6 Fe binding sites, normally 1/3 are bound

3) Converted to Fe2+ in bone marrow and added to protoporphyrin to form heme

4) heme is added to Hb and circulated in RBCs

5) RBC are broken up into heme (insoluble), Fe and porphyrin ring

6) Liver and spleen excretes heme as bilirubin (bile), iron is recycled

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6
Q

Stages of development of iron deficiency

A

1) ↓ iron stores and plasma ferritin levels

2) Changes in iron transport:
↑ absorption efficiency, transferrin iron binding capacity and receptors in bone marrow
↓ transferrin saturation %

3) Defective erythropoiesis: ↓ plasma iron and ↑ erythrocyte protoporphyrin

4) Iron deficiency anemia: microcytic hypochromic erythrocytes and ↓ erythrocyte production
- neural and behavior signs

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7
Q

Causes of iron deficiency

A

Decreased dietary iron: ↓ intake (vegan), ↓ absorption

Absorption inhibition: Ca/Zn mineral interactions, absorption inhibitors

Increased red cell mass/demand: pregnancy, childhood growth

Increased losses: occult losses (GI bleeding), hemolysis, vitamin E deficiency, G6PDH deficiency, heavy menstruation

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8
Q

Clinical iron deficiency anemia

A

Hb < 140 mg/L in men, Hb < 120 mg/L women

Free erythrocyte protoporphyrin = defective erythropoiesis

↓ transferrin saturation = ↓ transport

↓ ferritin = ↓ iron stores

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9
Q

Iron RDA and daily losses

A

Male RDA = 8 mg/day, 1mg losses per day

Female RDA = 18 mg/day, 1.4 mg losses per day

Losses due to: GI blood, mucosal, bile, desquamated skin cells and sweat, urinary losses, menstrual losses (.5 mg)

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10
Q

Iron absorption for heme and non-heme

Overall absorption

A

25% absorption for heme iron, absorbed as heme and bioavailable
- Fe released in enterocytes

~10% absorption of non-heme iron/elemental (between 1-50% absorption)
- Released from ligands by HCL and absorbed as Fe2+

Overall average rate of absorption = 10-15%
- RDA is set to take variable absorption into account

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11
Q

Regulation of iron stores during deficiency

A

During deficiency:
↑ synthesis of intestinal reductase divalent metal transporter 1 (DMT1) which absorbs Fe2+
- apical side

↑ ferroportin synthesis transports Fe2+ to basolateral side for transfer to transferrin

↓ Hepcidin peptide hormone levels from liver

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12
Q

Hepcidin function

Function during deficiency

A

Hepcidin normal function: ↓ ferroportin function
- makes it harder to release Fe stores

During iron deficiency: ↓ hepcidin released to ↑ Fe absorption

Anemia during chronic disease and infections: IL-6 ↑ hepcidin (prevents absorption) and ↓ transferrin

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13
Q

Reticuloendothelial cells are

A

Macrophages which have ferroportin

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14
Q

Hemochromatosis dysfunction

Genetic basis and public policy implications

Build up symptoms

A

Decreased hepcidin synthesis causing chronic Fe absorption (↑ ferroportin) and overload leading to tissue damage

5+ types autosomal recessive
More common than iron deficiency in men
- Public policy - can’t fortify with more iron because of people with hemochromatosis

Iron is deposited as hemosiderin –> cirrhosis of the liver

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