M. Hoshino et al., Laser photolysis studies of oxy- and carbonylhemoglobin in red blood cells. Effects of cell membrane on reversible binding of O-2 and CO, J PHYS CH B, 105(44), 2001, pp. 10976-10982
Nanosecond laser photolysis studies of hemoglobin in red blood cells (RBCs)
were performed to elucidate the effects of cell membrane on the oxygen upt
ake and release mechanism of RBCs. Oxy RBCs readily photodissociated O-2 by
the 355-nm laser pulse to give deoxy RBCs, which return to oxy RBCs at I a
tm air within ca. 50 mus after the pulse. The decay of deoxy RBCs is expres
sed as a sum of the two exponential functions of time, indicating that the
oxygen-rebinding reaction is composed of the two processes. The rate consta
nts, k(f) and k(S), for the faster and slower processes of the oxygen rebin
ding, measured as a function of the oxygen concentration, revealed that (1)
k(f) is independent of the oxygen concentration, [O-2], and (2) k(s) asymp
totically increases with an increase in [O-2] to a limiting value. These ki
netic results were markedly different from those obtained with the laser ph
otolysis of oxyhemoglobin molecules in aqueous solutions. On the basis of t
he kinetic studies for oxygen rebinding, the cell membrane of RBCs is sugge
sted to dominate the rates for oxygen uptake and release of hemoglobin in R
BCs. For comparison with oxygen, the CO-binding reactions of deoxy RBCs and
deoxyhemoglobin molecules in aqueous solutions were studied by laser flash
photolysis. The decay profiles of deoxy RBCs produced by laser photolysis
of carbonyl RBCs at various CO concentrations were identical with those of
deoxyhemoglobin molecules in aqueous solutions. Thus, in contrast to O-2, C
O molecules are supposed to freely diffuse in and out of RBCs through the c
ell membrane.