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Spatial Relationship and Functional Relevance of Three Lipid Domain Populations at the Erythrocyte Surface

Authors :
Louise Conrard
Amaury Stommen
Anne-Sophie Cloos
Jan Steinkühler
Rumiana Dimova
Hélène Pollet
Donatienne Tyteca
Source :
Cellular Physiology and Biochemistry, Vol 51, Iss 4, Pp 1544-1565 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Cell Physiol Biochem Press GmbH & Co KG, 2018.

Abstract

Background/Aims: Red blood cells (RBC) have been shown to exhibit stable submicrometric lipid domains enriched in cholesterol (chol), sphingomyelin (SM), phosphatidylcholine (PC) or ganglioside GM1, which represent the four main lipid classes of their outer plasma membrane leaflet. However, whether those lipid domains co-exist at the RBC surface or are spatially related and whether and how they are subjected to reorganization upon RBC deformation are not known. Methods: Using fluorescence and/or confocal microscopy and well-validated probes, we compared these four lipid-enriched domains for their abundance, curvature association, lipid order, temperature dependence, spatial dissociation and sensitivity to RBC mechanical stimulation. Results: Our data suggest that three populations of lipid domains with decreasing abundance coexist at the RBC surface: (i) chol-enriched ones, associated with RBC high curvature areas; (ii) GM1/PC/chol-enriched ones, present in low curvature areas; and (iii) SM/PC/chol-enriched ones, also found in low curvature areas. Whereas chol-enriched domains gather in increased curvature areas upon RBC deformation, low curvature-associated lipid domains increase in abundance either upon calcium influx during RBC deformation (GM1/PC/chol-enriched domains) or upon secondary calcium efflux during RBC shape restoration (SM/PC/chol-enriched domains). Hence, abrogation of these two domain populations is accompanied by a strong impairment of the intracellular calcium balance. Conclusion: Lipid domains could contribute to calcium influx and efflux by controlling the membrane distribution and/or the activity of the mechano-activated ion channel Piezo1 and the calcium pump PMCA. Whether this results from lipid domain biophysical properties, the strength of their anchorage to the underlying cytoskeleton and/or their correspondence with inner plasma membrane leaflet lipids remains to be demonstrated.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10158987 and 14219778
Volume :
51
Issue :
4
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Cellular Physiology and Biochemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.7ff445f0bd4c4f08b271dcf851b04fec
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1159/000495645