Novel Hemoglobin Particles—Promising New-Generation Hemoglobin-Based Oxygen Carriers

2014 
During the last 30 years, artificial oxygen carriers have been investigated intensively with the aim to develop universal blood substitutes. Favorably, hemoglobin-based oxygen carriers (HBOCs) are expected to meet the sophisticated requirements. However, the HBOCs tested until now show serious side effects, which resulted in failure of clinical trials and Food and Drug Administration disapproval. The main problem consists in vasoconstriction triggered by nitric oxide (NO) scavenging or/and oxygen oversupply in the pre-capillary arterioles. HBOCs with a size between 100 nm and 1 µm and high oxygen affinity are needed. Here we present a highly effective and simple fabrication procedure, which can provide hemoglobin particles (HbPs) with a narrow size distribution of around 700 nm, nearly uniform morphology, high oxygen affinity, and low immunogenicity. Isolated mouse glomeruli are successfully perfused with concentrated HbP suspensions without any observable vasoconstriction of the afferent arterioles. The results suggest no oxygen oversupply and limited NO scavenging by these particles, featuring them as a highly promising blood substitute.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    23
    References
    27
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []