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  • Title: Human mature red blood cells express caspase-3 and caspase-8, but are devoid of mitochondrial regulators of apoptosis.
    Author: Berg CP, Engels IH, Rothbart A, Lauber K, Renz A, Schlosser SF, Schulze-Osthoff K, Wesselborg S.
    Journal: Cell Death Differ; 2001 Dec; 8(12):1197-206. PubMed ID: 11753567.
    Abstract:
    Although proteases of the caspase family are essential mediators of apoptosis in nucleated cells, in anucleate cells their presence and potential functions are almost completely unknown. Human erythrocytes are a major cell population that does not contain a cell nucleus or other organelles. However, during senescence they undergo certain morphological alterations resembling apoptosis. In the present study, we found that mature erythrocytes contain considerable amounts of caspase-3 and -8, whereas essential components of the mitochondrial apoptotic cascade such as caspase-9, Apaf-1 and cytochrome c were missing. Strikingly, although caspases of erythrocytes were functionally active in vitro, they failed to become activated in intact erythrocytes either during prolonged storage or in response to various proapoptotic stimuli. Following an increase of cytosolic calcium, instead the cysteine protease calpain but not caspases became activated and mediated fodrin cleavage and other morphological alterations such as cell shrinkage. Our results therefore suggest that erythrocytes do not have a functional death system. In addition, because of the presence of procaspases and the absence of a cell nucleus and mitochondria erythrocytes may be an attractive system to dissect the role of certain apoptosis-regulatory pathways.
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