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Original Article

The Neurotoxic Effect of Sickle Cell Hemoglobin

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Pages 431-437 | Received 04 Sep 2003, Published online: 07 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

A growing body of experimental evidence suggests that the oxidative neurotoxicity of hemoglobin A may contribute to neuronal loss after CNS hemorrhage. Several hemoglobin variants, including hemoglobin S, are more potent oxidants in cell-free systems. However, despite the increased incidence of hemorrhagic stroke associated with sickle cell disease, little is known of the effect of hemoglobin S on cells of neural origin. In the present study, its toxicity was quantified and directly compared with that of hemoglobin A in murine cortical cell cultures. Reactive oxygen species production, as assessed by cellular fluorescence after treatment with dihydrorhodamine 123, was significantly increased by exposure to 10 μM hemoglobin S for 2–4 h. Neuronal death, as measured by propidium iodide staining and lactate dehydrogenase release, commenced at 4 h; for a 20-h exposure, the EC50 was approximately 0.71 μm. Glial cells were not injured. Cell death was completely blocked by iron chelation with deferoxamine or phenanthroline. Direct comparison of sister cultures exposed to either hemoglobin A or hemoglobin S revealed a similar amount of cell injury in both groups. A significant difference was consistently observed only after treatment with 1 μM hemoglobin for 20 h, which resulted in death of approximately one third more neurons with hemoglobin S than with hemoglobin A. The results of this study suggest that sickle cell hemoglobin is neurotoxic at physiologically relevant concentrations. This toxicity is iron-dependent, oxidative, and quantitatively similar to that produced by hemoglobin A.

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