Oxidant damage of the lipids and proteins of the erythrocyte membranes in unstable hemoglobin disease. Evidence for the role of lipid peroxidation.

Abstract
Since unstable hemoglobins have been considered a source of reactive oxygen radicals, and oxidative membrane damage a prehemolytic event, we examined the erythrocyte membranes of six patients (three splenectomized) with hemoglobin Köln disease. In the hydrogen peroxide stress test, the patients' erythrocytes generated more than twice the malonyldialdehyde (a lipid peroxidative product) than control erythrocytes. Fluorescence spectra of lipid extracts of the patients' erythrocytes showed an excitation maximum at 400 nm and an emission maximum of 460 nm, characteristic of malonyldialdehyde lipid adducts. Two types of membrane polypeptide aggregates were found in the erythrocytes of the splenectomized patients. The first, which were dissociable by treatment with mercaptoethanol, contained disulfide-linked spectrin, band 3 and globin. The second, not dissociable by mercaptoethanol, had an amino acid composition similar to that of erythrocyte membranes and spectrin (unlike globin) and like that of aggregates produced by the action of malonyldialdehyde on normal erythrocyte membranes. Atomic absorption spectroscopy of hemoglobin Köln erythrocytes showed no increase in calcium content implying that these cross-links were not due to calcium-stimulated transglutaminase. Using a micropipette technique, we demonstrated that erythrocytes containing membrane aggregates from splenectomized patients were less deformable while aggregate-free erythrocytes from non-splenectomized patients had normal deformability. We conclude that the erythrocyte membranes in hemoglobin Köln disease show evidence of lipid peroxidation with production of malonyldialdehyde, and that the nondissociable membrane aggregates formed in this disease are likely cross-linked by malonyldialdehyde. Because the erythrocytes containing membrane aggregates from splenectomized patients with unstable hemoglobin disease show decreased membrane deformability, we hypothesize that this abnormality results in premature erythrocyte destruction in vivo.