Pb(II) Induces Scramblase Activation and Ceramide-Domain Generation in Red Blood Cells.

["Ahyayauch, Hasna", "Garc\u00eda-Arribas, Aritz B", "Sot, Jes\u00fas", "Gonz\u00e1lez-Ram\u00edrez, Emilio J", "Busto, Jon V", "Monasterio, Bingen G", "Jim\u00e9nez-Rojo, Noemi", "Contreras, F Xabier", "Rend\u00f3n-Ram\u00edrez, Adela", "Martin, Cesar", "Alonso, Alicia", "Go\u00f1i, F\u00e9lix M"]
Scientific reports 2018
Open on PubMed

The mechanisms of Pb(II) toxicity have been studied in human red blood cells using confocal microscopy, immunolabeling, fluorescence-activated cell sorting and atomic force microscopy. The process follows a sequence of events, starting with calcium entry, followed by potassium release, morphological change, generation of ceramide, lipid flip-flop and finally cell lysis. Clotrimazole blocks potassium channels and the whole process is inhibited. Immunolabeling reveals the generation of ceramide-enriched domains linked to a cell morphological change, while the use of a neutral sphingomyelinase inhibitor greatly delays the process after the morphological change, and lipid flip-flop is significantly reduced. These facts point to three major checkpoints in the process: first the upstream exchange of calcium and potassium, then ceramide domain formation, and finally the downstream scramblase activation necessary for cell lysis. In addition, partial non-cytotoxic cholesterol depletion of red blood cells accelerates the process as the morphological change occurs faster. Cholesterol could have a role in modulating the properties of the ceramide-enriched domains. This work is relevant in the context of cell death, heavy metal toxicity and sphingolipid signaling.