Magnetophoretic and Spectral Characterization of Oxyhemoglobin to
Deoxyhemoglobin: Chemical vs Enzymatic Process
Abstract
A new method for hemoglobin (Hb) deoxygenation and re-oxygenation, in
suspension or within red blood cells, RBCs, is described using the
commercial enzyme product, EC-Oxyrase®. This method using EC-Oxyrase has
several advantages over established deoxygenation methodologies, such as
avoiding side reactions that produce methemoglobin, eliminating the need
of a sparging deoxygenation gas and airtight vessels, as well as easy
re-oxygenation by washing and adding to a normal buffer with dissolved
oxygen (DO). Spectra of deoxyHb and metHb from RBCs using three
preparation methods: sodium dithionite, sodium nitrite and Oxyrase, show
high purity of the deoxyHb using Oxyrase (with little to no
methemoglobin or hemichrome production from side reactions). The
deoxygenation action of Oxyrase follows first order reaction kinetics.
Paramagnetic characteristics of intracellular hemoglobin in RBCs are
compared using cell tracking velocimetry for healthy and sickle cell
disease (SCD) donors and oxygen dissociation curves show that the
function of healthy RBCs is unchanged after Oxyrase treatment. The
results confirm that this enzymatic approach to deoxygenation produces
pure deoxyhemoglobin, can be re-oxygenated easily, prepared aerobically
and has similar paramagnetic mobility to the existing methods.