Back to Search Start Over

Stimulation of Suicidal Erythrocyte Death by the Antimalarial Drug Mefloquine

Authors :
Rosi Bissinger
Susanne Barking
Kousi Alzoubi
Guilai Liu
Guoxing Liu
Florian Lang
Source :
Cellular Physiology and Biochemistry, Vol 36, Iss 4, Pp 1395-1405 (2015)
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Cell Physiol Biochem Press GmbH & Co KG, 2015.

Abstract

Background: The antimalarial drug mefloquine has previously been shown to stimulate apoptosis of nucleated cells. Similar to apoptosis, erythrocytes may enter suicidal death or eryptosis, which is characterized by cell shrinkage and phospholipid scrambling of the erythrocyte cell membrane with phosphatidylserine translocation to the erythrocyte surface. Stimulators of eryptosis include oxidative stress, increase of cytosolic Ca2+-activity ([Ca2+]i), and ceramide. Methods: Phosphatidylserine abundance at the cell surface was estimated from annexin V binding, cell volume from forward scatter, reactive oxidant species (ROS) from 2′,7′-dichlorodihydrofluorescein diacetate (DCFDA) fluorescence, [Ca2+]i from Fluo3-fluorescence, and ceramide abundance from specific antibody binding. Results: A 48 h treatment of human erythrocytes with mefloquine significantly increased the percentage of annexin-V-binding cells (≥5 µg/ml), significantly decreased forward scatter (≥5 µg/ml), significantly increased ROS abundance (5 µg/ml), significantly increased [Ca2+]i (7.5 µg/ml) and significantly increased ceramide abundance (10 µg/ml). The up-regulation of annexin-V-binding following mefloquine treatment was significantly blunted but not abolished by removal of extracellular Ca2+. Even in the absence of extracellular Ca2+, mefloquine significantly increased annexin-V-binding. Conclusions: Mefloquine treatment leads to erythrocyte shrinkage and erythrocyte membrane scrambling, effects at least partially due to induction of oxidative stress, increase of [Ca2+]i and up-regulation of ceramide abundance.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10158987 and 14219778
Volume :
36
Issue :
4
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Cellular Physiology and Biochemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.269651cf879c46c68093600abd4d9abf
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1159/000430305