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Abstract
Oxidative stress is one of the key factors that leads to red blood cells (RBCs) aging, and impairs their biomechanics and oxygen delivery. It occurs during numerous pathological processes and causes anaemia, one of the most frequent side effects of cancer chemotherapy. Here, we used microfluidics to simulate the microcirculation of RBCs under oxidative stress induced by tert-Butyl hydroperoxide. Oxidative stress was expected to make RBCs more rigid, which would lead to decrease their transit velocity in microfluidic channels. However, single-cell tracking combined with cytological and AFM studies reveals cell heterogeneity, which increases with the level of oxidative stress. The data indicates that the built-in antioxidant defence system has a limit exceeding which haemoglobin oxidation, membrane, and cytoskeleton transformation occurs. It leads to cell swelling, increased stiffness and adhesion, resulting in a decrease in the transit velocity in microcapillaries. However, even at high levels of oxidative stress, there are persistent cells in the population with an undisturbed biophysical phenotype that retain the ability to move in microcapillaries. Developed microfluidic analysis can be used to determine RBCs’ antioxidant capacity for the minimization of anaemia during cancer chemotherapy.
Simulated microcirculation of red blood cells in a microfluidic device reveals two subpopulations of slow-moving cells and persistent cells that retain morphology and membrane structure under oxidative stress.
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1 Alferov University, Department of Physics, Saint-Petersburg, Russia
2 Sechenov Institute of Evolutionary Physiology and Biochemistry of the RAS, Saint-Petersburg, Russia
3 Peter the Great St.Petersburg Polytechnic University, Saint-Petersburg, Russia (GRID:grid.32495.39) (ISNI:0000 0000 9795 6893)
4 Sechenov Institute of Evolutionary Physiology and Biochemistry of the RAS, Saint-Petersburg, Russia (GRID:grid.32495.39)
5 Alferov University, Department of Physics, Saint-Petersburg, Russia (GRID:grid.32495.39); Institute for Analytical Instrumentation of the RAS, Saint-Petersburg, Russia (GRID:grid.32495.39)