作者
Travis Nemkov,Daniel Stephenson,Eric J. Earley,Gregory R. Keele,Ariel M. Hay,Alicia Key,Zachary B. Haiman,Christopher C. Erickson,Monika Dzieciątkowska,Julie A. Reisz,Amy Moore,Mars Stone,Xutao Deng,Steven Kleinman,Steven L. Spitalnik,Eldad A. Hod,Krystalyn E. Hudson,Kirk C. Hansen,Bernhard Ø. Palsson,Gary A. Churchill,Nareg H. Roubinian,Philip J. Norris,Michael P. Busch,James C. Zimring,Grier P. Page,Angelo D’Alessandro
摘要
Mature red blood cells (RBCs) lack mitochondria, and thus exclusively rely on glycolysis to generate adenosine triphosphate (ATP) during aging in vivo or storage in the blood bank. Here we leveraged 13,029 volunteers from the Recipient Epidemiology and Donor Evaluation Study to identify an association between end-of-storage levels of glycolytic metabolites and donor age, sex, and ancestry-specific genetic polymorphisms in regions encoding phosphofructokinase 1, platelet (detected in mature RBCs), hexokinase 1, ADP-ribosyl cyclase 1 and 2 (CD38/BST1). Gene-metabolite associations were validated in fresh and stored RBCs from 525 Diversity Outbred mice, and via multi-omics characterization of 1,929 samples from 643 human RBC units during storage. ATP and hypoxanthine levels - and the genetic traits linked to them - were associated with hemolysis in vitro and in vivo, both in healthy autologous transfusion recipients and in 5,816 critically ill patients receiving heterologous transfusions, suggesting their potential as markers to improve transfusion outcomes.