Haematologica (Mar 2021)

Beta thalassemia minor is a beneficial determinant of red blood cell storage lesion

  • Vassilis L. Tzounakas,
  • Alkmini T. Anastasiadi,
  • Davide Stefanoni,
  • Francesca Cendali,
  • Lorenzo Bertolone,
  • Fabia Gamboni,
  • Monika Dzieciatkowska,
  • Pantelis Rousakis,
  • Athina Vergaki,
  • Vassilis Soulakis,
  • Ourania E. Tsitsilonis,
  • Konstantinos Stamoulis,
  • Issidora S. Papassideri,
  • Anastasios G. Kriebardis,
  • Angelo D’Alessandro,
  • Marianna H. Antonelou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2020.273946
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 107, no. 1

Abstract

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Blood donor genetics and lifestyle affect the quality of red blood cell (RBC) storage. Heterozygotes for beta thalassemia (bThal+) constitute a non-negligible proportion of blood donors in the Mediterranean and other geographical areas. The unique hematological profile of bThal+ could affect the capacity of enduring storage stress, however, the storability of bThal+ RBC is largely unknown. In this study, RBC from 18 bThal+ donors were stored in the cold and profiled for primary (hemolysis) and secondary (phosphatidylserine exposure, potassium leakage, oxidative stress) quality measures, and metabolomics, versus sex- and age-matched controls. The bThal+ units exhibited better levels of storage hemolysis and susceptibility to lysis following osmotic, oxidative and mechanical insults. Moreover, bThal+ RBC had a lower percentage of surface removal signaling, reactive oxygen species and oxidative defects to membrane components at late stages of storage. Lower potassium accumulation and higher uratedependent antioxidant capacity were noted in the bThal+ supernatant. Full metabolomics analyses revealed alterations in purine and arginine pathways at baseline, along with activation of the pentose phosphate pathway and glycolysis upstream to pyruvate kinase in bThal+ RBC. Upon storage, substantial changes were observed in arginine, purine and vitamin B6 metabolism, as well as in the hexosamine pathway. A high degree of glutamate generation in bThal+ RBC was accompanied by low levels of purine oxidation products (IMP, hypoxanthine, allantoin). The bThal mutations impact the metabolism and the susceptibility to hemolysis of stored RBC, suggesting good post-transfusion recovery. However, hemoglobin increment and other clinical outcomes of bThal+ RBC transfusion deserve elucidation by future studies.