Pleiotropic effects of intravascular haemolysis on vascular homeostasis

GJ Kato, JG Taylor - British journal of haematology, 2010 - Wiley Online Library
British journal of haematology, 2010Wiley Online Library
The breakdown of senescent or defective red blood cells releases red cell contents,
especially haemoglobin, which scavenges nitric oxide (NO) and decomposes to haem and
free iron. These are potent oxidants, all of which have promoted the evolution of inducible
and vasculoprotective compensatory pathways to rapidly clear and detoxify haemoglobin,
haem and iron. Chronic haemolytic red cell disorders as diverse as sickle cell disease,
thalassaemia, unstable haemoglobinopathy, cytoskeletal defects and enzymopathies have …
Summary
The breakdown of senescent or defective red blood cells releases red cell contents, especially haemoglobin, which scavenges nitric oxide (NO) and decomposes to haem and free iron. These are potent oxidants, all of which have promoted the evolution of inducible and vasculoprotective compensatory pathways to rapidly clear and detoxify haemoglobin, haem and iron. Chronic haemolytic red cell disorders as diverse as sickle cell disease, thalassaemia, unstable haemoglobinopathy, cytoskeletal defects and enzymopathies have been linked to a clinical constellation of pulmonary hypertension, priapism, leg ulceration and possibly cerebrovascular disease and thrombosis. Besides free haemoglobin, haemolysis has been associated with extracellular arginase that limits substrate availability to NO synthase, endogenous inhibitors of NO synthase activity, and inappropriate activation of haemostatic pathways. This article reviews the haemolytic disorders that have been reported to manifest vascular complications, and explores the speculative possibility that haemolysis mediates some of the vascular complications of inflammation and diabetes.
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