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Original Article

Inhibition of the heme-induced hemolysis of red blood cells by the chlorite-based drug WF10

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Pages 1386-1395 | Received 12 Jul 2016, Accepted 19 Oct 2016, Published online: 23 Nov 2016
 

Abstract

Excessive release of hemoglobin from red blood cells markedly disturbs the health status of patients due to cytotoxic effects of free hemoglobin and heme. The latter component is able to initiate novel hemolytic events in unperturbed red blood cells. We modeled this process by incubation of ferric protoporphyrin IX with freshly isolated red blood cells from healthy volunteers. The heme-induced hemolysis was inhibited in a concentration-dependent manner by the chlorite-based drug WF10, whereby the hemolysis degree was totally abolished at a molar ratio of 1:2 between chlorite and heme. Upon incubation of heme with WF10, the ultraviolet-visible spectrum changed, whereas the release of iron from heme and the appearance of fluorescent breakdown products of the porphyrin ring were negligible at this ratio, but increased with increasing excess of chlorite over heme. Thus, inhibition of hemolysis by WF10 takes already place at those chlorite concentrations, where no degradation of the porphyrin ring occurs. As WF10 is applied in form of an intravenous infusion to patients with severe inflammatory states, these data support the hypothesis that the beneficial WF10 effects are closely associated with inactivation of free heme.

Disclosure statement

Friedrich-Wilhelm Kuehne is the inventor of the drug WF10 and researcher at OXO Chemie (Thailand) Co., Ltd, Bangkok, Thailand. All other authors report no declaration of interest.

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