Significant relationships between ion transport and membrane lipid composition (cholesterol, total phospholipids and sphingomyelins) were found in erythrocytes of salt hypertensive Dahl rats. In these animals mean cellular hemoglobin content correlated negatively with Na+-K+ pump activity and Na+ leak but positively with Na+-K+ cotransport activity.
Immature erythrocytes exhibit lower mean cellular hemoglobin content (MCHC) than mature ones. The aim of the present study was to find a relationship between erythrocyte maturity, membrane lipid composition and ion transport activity in Wistar rats aged three months which were subjected to repeated hemorrhage (blood loss 2 ml/day for 6 days) to enrich circulating erythrocytes with immature forms.
Immature and mature erythrocyte fractions in control and hemorrhaged rats were separated by repeated centrifugation. Hemorrhaged rats had increased number of reticulocytes but reduced hematocrit and MCHC compared to control rats.
Immature erythrocytes of hemorrhaged rats differed from mature ones of control animals by elevated Na+-K+ pump activity, reduced Na+-K+ cotransport activity and increased Rb+ leak. These ion transport changes in immature erythrocytes were accompanied by higher concentration of total phospholipids in their cell membranes.
Membrane phospholipid content correlated positively with Na+-K+ pump activity and cation leaks but negatively with Na+-K+ cotransport activity. Moreover, they were also negatively related with MCHC which correlated negatively with Na+-K+ pump activity and Rb+ leak but positively with Na+K+ cotransport activity.
Thus certain abnormalities of erythrocyte ion transport and membrane lipid composition detected in hypertensive animals might be caused by higher incidence of immature cells.