We report a mouse model of neocytolysis. Neocytolysis is caused by excessive ROS formation mediated by HIF. ROS is generated from increased mitochondria in reticulocytes. Hypoxia-generated RBCs have low catalase and are preferentially destroyed. Reduced catalase is regulated by increased microRNA-21.
Key Points• Heme oxygenase-1 levels increase during erythroid differentiation.• Heme oxygenase-1 actively participates in maintaining appropriate hemoglobinization rates.Heme is essential for the function of all aerobic cells. However, it can be toxic when it occurs in a non-protein-bound form; cells maintain a fine balance between heme synthesis and catabolism. The only physiological mechanism of heme degradation is by heme oxygenases (HOs). The heme-inducible isoform, HO-1, has been extensively studied in numerous nonerythroid cells, but virtually nothing is known about the expression and potential significance of HO-1 in developing red blood cells. We have demonstrated that HO-1 is present in erythroid cells and that its expression is upregulated during erythroid differentiation. Overexpression of HO-1 in erythroid cells impairs hemoglobin synthesis, whereas HO-1 absence enhances hemoglobinization in cultured erythroid cells. Based on these results, we conclude that HO-1 controls the regulatory heme pool at appropriate levels for any given stage of erythroid differentiation. In summary, our study brings to light the importance of HO-1 expression for erythroid development and expands our knowledge about the fine regulation of hemoglobin synthesis in erythroid cells. Our results indicate that HO-1 plays an important role as a coregulator of the erythroid differentiation process. Moreover, HO-1 expression must be tightly regulated during red blood cell development. (Blood.
• Cells expressing JAK2 E846D or R1063H exhibit pathologic STAT5 activation in the specific context of EPOR.• Cooperation of germ line JAK2 mutations E846D and R1063H defines a JAK2-signaling threshold for induction of erythrocytosis.The role of somatic JAK2 mutations in clonal myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPNs) is well established. Recently, germ line JAK2 mutations were associated with polyclonal hereditary thrombocytosis and triple-negative MPNs. We studied a patient who inherited 2 heterozygous JAK2 mutations, E846D from the mother and R1063H from the father, and exhibited erythrocytosis and megakaryocytic atypia but normal platelet number. Culture of erythroid progenitors from the patient and his parents revealed hypersensitivity to erythropoietin (EPO). Using cellular models, we show that both E846D and R1063H variants lead to constitutive signaling (albeit much weaker than JAK2 V617F), and both weakly hyperactivate JAK2/STAT5 signaling only in the specific context of the EPO receptor (EPOR). JAK2 E846D exhibited slightly stronger effects than JAK2 R1063H and caused prolonged EPO-induced phosphorylation of JAK2/STAT5 via EPOR. We propose that JAK2 E846D predominantly contributes to erythrocytosis, but is not sufficient for the full pathological phenotype to develop. JAK2 R1063H, with very weak effect on JAK2/ STAT5 signaling, is necessary to augment JAK2 activity caused by E846D above a threshold level leading to erythrocytosis with megakaryocyte abnormalities. Both mutations were detected in the germ line of rare polycythemia vera, as well as certain leukemia patients, suggesting that they might predispose to hematological malignancy.
Thalassemias are a heterogeneous group of red blood cell disorders, considered a major cause of morbidity and mortality among genetic diseases. However, there is still no universally available cure for thalassemias. The underlying basis of thalassemia pathology is the premature apoptotic destruction of erythroblasts causing ineffective erythropoiesis. In β-thalassemia, β-globin synthesis is reduced causing α-globin accumulation. Unpaired globin chains, with heme attached to them, accumulate in thalassemic erythroblasts causing oxidative stress and the premature cell death. We hypothesize that in β-thalassemia heme oxygenase (HO) 1 could play a pathogenic role in the development of anemia and ineffective erythropoiesis. To test this hypothesis, we exploited a mouse model of β-thalassemia intermedia, Th3/ We observed that HO inhibition using tin protoporphyrin IX (SnPP) decreased heme-iron recycling in the liver and ameliorated anemia in the Th3/ mice. SnPP administration led to a decrease in erythropoietin and increase in hepcidin serum levels, changes that were accompanied by an alleviation of ineffective erythropoiesis in Th3/ mice. Additionally, the bone marrow from Th3/ mice treated with SnPP exhibited decreased heme catabolism and diminished iron release as well as reduced apoptosis. Our results indicate that the iron released from heme because of HO activity contributes to the pathophysiology of thalassemia. Therefore, new therapies that suppress heme catabolism may be beneficial in ameliorating the anemia and ineffective erythropoiesis in thalassemias.
Mutations of the truncated cytoplasmic domain of human erythropoietin receptor (EPOR) result in gain-of-function of erythropoietin (EPO) signaling and a dominantly inherited polycythemia, primary familial and congenital polycythemia (PFCP). We interrogated the unexplained transient absence of perinatal polycythemia observed in PFCP patients using an animal model of PFCP to examine its erythropoiesis during embryonic, perinatal, and early postnatal periods. In this model, we replaced the murine EpoR gene (mEpoR) with the wild-type human EPOR (wtHEPOR) or mutant human EPOR gene (mtHEPOR) and previously reported that the gain-of-function mtHEPOR mice become polycythemic at 3~6 weeks of age, but not at birth, similar to the phenotype of PFCP patients. In contrast wtHEPOR mice had sustained anemia. We report that the mtHEPOR fetuses are polycythemic, but their polycythemia is abrogated in the perinatal period and reappears again at 3 weeks after birth. mtHEPOR fetuses have a delayed switch from primitive to definitive erythropoiesis, augmented erythropoietin signaling, and prolonged Stat5 phosphorylation while the wtHEPOR fetuses are anemic. Our study demonstrates the in vivo effect of excessive EPO/EPOR signaling on developmental erythropoiesis switch and describes that fetal polycythemia in this PFCP model is followed by transient correction of polycythemia in perinatal life associated with low Epo levels and increased expression of erythrocytes’ phosphatidylserine. We suggest that neocytolysis contributes to the observed perinatal correction of polycythemia in mtHEPOR newborns as embryos leaving the hypoxic uterus are exposed to normoxia at birth.
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