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Title: Calorimetric studies of oxyhemoglobin dissociation. II. Erythrocytic oxygen depletion by sodium dithionite. Author: Forlani L, Ioppolo C, Antonini E, Marini MA. Journal: J Inorg Biochem; 1985 Feb; 23(2):109-17. PubMed ID: 3973582. Abstract: Dithionite causes the depletion of dioxygen from suspensions of erythrocytes by reduction of the external dioxygen and not by diffusion into the cell. The molar enthalpy for the reduction shows a small difference with respect to the values found for free hemoglobin; and the normal stoichiometry of 2 moles dithionite/mole dioxygen found there is not observed with erythrocytes. At low hematocrit, the stoichiometry is 2.6:1 and decreases to 1.5:1 at high hematocrit. The change is not due to differences in the hemoglobin saturation or to an inability of dithionite to reduce all dioxygen present at the higher hematocrit. Neither catalase nor peroxidase added to the extracellular volume significantly alters the stoichiometry or the enthalpy of dioxygen reduction by dithionite. Addition of superoxide dismutase, however, restores the normal stoichiometry at high hematocrit and further increases the stoichiometry at low hematocrit. The calorimetrical signal of hydrogen peroxide, clearly seen with free dioxygen, is not present with erythrocytes. In all these cases the total heat evolved is the same.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]