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1.
Heme formation in reticulocytes from rabbits and rodents is subject to end product negative feedback regulation: intracellular "free" heme has been shown to control acquisition of transferrin iron for heme synthesis. To identify the site of control of heme biosynthesis in the human erythron, immature erythroid cells were obtained from peripheral blood and aspirated bone marrow. After incubation with human 59Fe transferrin, 2-[14C]glycine, or 4-[14C]delta-aminolevulinate, isotopic incorporation into extracted heme was determined. Addition of cycloheximide to increase endogenous free heme, reduced incorporation of labeled glycine and iron but not delta-aminolevulinate into cell heme. Incorporation of glycine and iron was also sensitive to inhibition by exogenous hematin (Ki, 30 and 45 microM, respectively) i.e. at concentrations in the range which affect cell-free protein synthesis in reticulocyte lysates. Hematin treatment rapidly diminished incorporation of intracellular 59Fe into heme by human erythroid cells but assimilation of 4-[14C]delta-aminolevulinate into heme was insensitive to inhibition by hematin (Ki greater than 100 microM). In human reticulocytes (unlike those from rabbits), addition of ferric salicylaldehyde isonicotinoylhydrazone, to increase the pre-heme iron pool independently of the transferrin cycle, failed to promote heme synthesis or modify feedback inhibition induced by hematin. In human erythroid cells (but not rabbit reticulocytes) pre-incubation with unlabeled delta-aminolevulinate or protoporphyrin IX greatly stimulated utilization of cell 59Fe for heme synthesis and also attenuated end product inhibition. In human erythroid cells heme biosynthesis is thus primarily regulated by feedback inhibition at one or more steps which lead to delta-aminolevulinate formation. Hence in man the regulatory process affects generation of the first committed precursor of porphyrin biosynthesis by delta-aminolevulinate synthetase, whereas in the rabbit separate regulatory mechanisms exist which control the incorporation of iron into protoporphyrin IX.  相似文献   

2.
Heme formation in the erythron is subject to end product regulation by negative feedback, but the exact point of metabolic control in human erythroid cells is unknown. To investigate the mode of action of heme on its own formation, the effects of micromolar concentrations of hemin on de novo synthesis of protoporphyrin IX and delta-aminolevulinate (delta-ALA) by intact human reticulocytes were examined in the presence of 1 mM alpha,alpha'-bipyridyl and 200 microM 4,6-dioxoheptanoate to block their further conversion by ferrochelatase or delta-ALA dehydrase, respectively. At final concentrations (25-40 microM), hemin, which is known to reduce incorporation of [2-14C]glycine into cellular heme, significantly inhibited formation of protoporphyrin IX and total delta-aminolevulinate in situ by these cells. Since synthesis of the first committed precursor, delta-aminolevulinate, as well as protoporphyrin (which is derived from it) were diminished, the effects of hemin on delta-aminolevulinate synthase (EC 2.3.1.37) were studied. Hemin, at concentrations up to 40 microM, had no direct effect on enzymatic activity, as measured with [5-14C] alpha-ketoglutarate (in hypotonically lysed cells) or [1,4-14C]succinyl coenzyme A (in deoxycholate lysates), even after preincubation. However, when intact human reticulocytes were incubated with hemin before assay for delta-ALA synthase, there was a rapid, concentration-dependent reduction in enzymatic activity (mean 42 and 23% inhibition after 60 min for these two substrates, respectively). Hemin had no effect on steady-state levels of delta-ALA synthase mRNA, as determined by Northern blot hybridization using an erythroid-specific human cDNA probe. Thus, a mechanism for inducing feedback inhibition of the tetrapyrrole pathway exists in human erythroid cells. It controls formation of the first committed precursor of protoporphyrin IX, delta-aminolevulinate, and hence regulates heme biosynthesis by limiting the availability of the porphyrin, rather than the metal substrate for the ferrochelatase reaction. Hemin interacts with constituents of the intact reticulocyte significantly to reduce delta-aminolevulinic acid synthase activity by an indirect cellular process that does not influence the abundance of erythroid-specific synthase mRNA but may either inhibit its ribosomal translation in an unknown manner or promote degradation of the enzyme itself by specific proteolysis.  相似文献   

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5.
Although the physiological role of tissue-specific translational control of gene expression in mammals has long been suspected on the basis of biochemical studies, direct evidence has been lacking. Here, we report on the targeted disruption of the gene encoding the heme-regulated eIF2alpha kinase (HRI) in mice. We establish that HRI, which is expressed predominantly in erythroid cells, regulates the synthesis of both alpha- and beta-globins in red blood cell (RBC) precursors by inhibiting the general translation initiation factor eIF2. This inhibition occurs when the intracellular concentration of heme declines, thereby preventing the synthesis of globin peptides in excess of heme. In iron-deficient HRI(-/-) mice, globins devoid of heme aggregated within the RBC and its precursors, resulting in a hyperchromic, normocytic anemia with decreased RBC counts, compensatory erythroid hyperplasia and accelerated apoptosis in bone marrow and spleen. Thus, HRI is a physiological regulator of gene expression and cell survival in the erythroid lineage.  相似文献   

6.
The biosynthesis of human acetylated fetal hemoglobin (Hb F1) has been examined by incubating the following cell types with [3H]leucine: (a) burst-forming unit erythroid cells cultured from umbilical cord mononuclear cells, (b) infant bone marrow, (c) umbilical cord blood, and (d) peripheral blood cells from adults with elevated fetal hemoglobin. Newly synthesized Hb F1 was 18-20% that of Hb F0 in burst-forming unit erythroid cells which were immature, mature, or in an intermediate state of development. In infant marrow and in infant and adult peripheral blood the extant Hb F1 comprised 10.8 +/- 1.8% of the total Hb F. In marrow cells the specific radioactivity (cpm/mg) of Hb F1 was 1.4-2.0-times greater than that of Hb F0. In peripheral blood cells these ratios were slightly greater. [3H]Leucine-labeled infant bone marrow, umbilical cord blood, and adult peripheral blood cells were subjected to density gradient ultracentrifugation. The ratios of specific radioactivity for Hb F1/Hb F0 increased from 1.0-1.8 in the lightest cell zone to 5.2-9.0 in the more dense cells. Thus the biosynthesis of Hb F1 is enhanced in cells which are more mature than those responsible for the bulk of hemoglobin synthesis, and the acetylation of Hb F provides a marker of erythroid cell maturation.  相似文献   

7.
Antiserum prepared from a rabbit which was immunized with human erythrocyte glycerate-2,3-P2 synthase was found to react with glycerate-2,3-P2 synthase in rabbit erythroid cells. By using this antiserum, it was proved that the specific activity of this enzyme was unchanged during the development of the rabbit erythroid cells. This leads us to conclude that the increased activity of glycerate-2,3-P2 synthase in developing erythroid cells (Narita, H., Ikura, K., Yanagawa, S., Sasaki, R., Chiba, H., Saimyoji, H., and Kumagai, N. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 5230-5235) is due to the accumulation of enzyme protein. There is at least a 16-fold increase in the level of this protein during development from bone marrow erythroid cells to erythrocytes. The synthesis of glycerate-2,3-P2 synthase was shown to occur in rabbit reticulocytes and bone marrow erythroid cells. These cells were incubated for protein synthesis and the protein synthesized was precipitated with the anti-glycerate-2,3-P2 synthase antiserum and separated on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels. The immunoprecipitated product was shown to produce fragments of the same molecular weight after digestion with V8 protease as did the pure glycerate-2,3-P2 synthase. The proportion of glycerate-2,3-P2 synthase synthesis in reticulocytes (0.04% of total protein synthesis) was comparable to the level of this protein in the cells (0.07% of the total protein).  相似文献   

8.
9.
Erythroid colonies were generated in response to erythropoietin in plasma clot cultures of sheep and goat bone marrow cells. At low concentration erythropoietin only hemoglobin A (betaA globin) was synthesized in goat cultures, but at high concentrations 50% of the hemoglobin synthesized was hemoglobin C (betaC globin). This effect of erythropoietin on the expression of a specific beta globin gene was manifested only after 72 h in vitro and followed the development of erythroid colonies. Sheep colonies behaved differently from those of goat in that little or no betaC globin synthesis occurred even at high erythropoietin concentration. To investigate this difference, sheep marrow cells were fractionated by unit gravity sedimentation. The erythroid colony-forming cells sedimented more rapidly (3.5-6mm/h) than the hemoglobinized eththroid precursors (1-3.5 mm/h), suggesting that the colonies were formed from an early erythroid precursor, However, the colonies formed from the sheep marrow fractions synthesized only betaA globin even at concentrations of erythropoietin sufficient to stimulate betaC globin synthesis in goat colonies. Morphologically, the goat colonies were larger and more mature than those of the sheep. By 96 h in vitro three-fourths of the goat colonies contained enucleated red cells compared to only 3% of the sheep colonies. Thus, erythropoietin had an equivalent effect in stimulating erythroid colony growth from the marrow of both species although there were both biochemical and morphological differences between the colonies. Hemoglobin switching appeared to require exposure of an early precursor to high erythropoietin concentration, but the results with sheep marrow suggested that the rate of colony growth and cellular maturation might also be important.  相似文献   

10.
Iron deficiency leads to abnormal expression and function of band 3 protein in erythrocytes, but the underlying mechanisms remain elusive. The mRNA of erythroid‐specific 5‐aminolevulinate synthase (eALAS) contains an iron response element and the eALAS protein is an important mediator of iron utilization by erythrocytes. In this study, we investigated the effect of short hairpin RNA (shRNA) mediated silencing of eALAS on the expression of band 3 protein induced by iron. By real‐time RT‐PCR and Western blot we showed that at mRNA and protein level iron‐induced expression of band 3 protein was lower in eALAS‐shRNA transfected K562 cells than in control cells. Of note, the lowest expression was detected in K562 cells cultured in iron deficiency condition (p < 0.01). Thus either iron deficiency or depletion of eALAS could suppress the expression of erythroid band 3 protein. These results demonstrated for the first time that iron and the iron‐regulatory system regulate the expression of the erythrocyte membrane proteins. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

11.
Using normal bone marrow as target cells, we assayed the colony-forming efficiency of early and late erythroid progenitor cells and granulocyte-macrophage progenitor cells using several different lots of fetal bovine serum (FBS). There was a marked difference in the ability of these sera to support colony formation, particularly in erythroid colony assays. When adsorbed by activated charcoal, all these sera supported erythroid colony formation more efficiently than before adsorption. There was no significant effect of charcoal adsorption of FBS on granulocyte-macrophage colony formation. Gel-filtration study showed that charcoal adsorption diminished low-molecular-weight fractions by less than 5000 Da. The inhibitory activity of this fraction was heat labile and Pronase sensitive. Concentrated samples obtained from these fractions inhibited erythroid colony formation in a dose-dependent manner. These results suggest that low-molecular-weight inhibitors that are relatively specific to erythropoiesis play a critical role in the lot differences of FBS for erythroid colony formation.  相似文献   

12.
Recent studies have shown that the T cell-derived cytokine, interleukin-17 (IL-17), stimulates hematopoiesis, specifically granulopoiesis inducing expansion of committed and immature progenitors in bone marrow. Our previous results pointed to its role in erythropoiesis too, demonstrating significant stimulation of BFU-E and suppression of CFU-E growth in the bone marrow from normal mice. As different sensitivities of erythroid and myeloid progenitor cells to nitric oxide (NO) were found, we considered the possibility that the observed effects of IL-17 were mediated by NO. The effects of recombinant mouse IL-17, NO donor (sodium nitroprusside - SNP) and two NO synthases inhibitors (L-NAME and aminoguanidine) on erythroid progenitor cells growth, as well as the ability of IL-17 to induce nitric oxide production in murine bone marrow cells, were examined. In addition, we tested whether the inhibition of CFU-E colony formation by IL-17 could be corrected by erythropoietin (Epo), the principal regulator of erythropoiesis. We demonstrated that IL-17 can stimulate low level production of NO in murine bone marrow cells. Exogenously added NO inhibited CFU-E colony formation, whereas both L-NAME and aminoguanidine reversed the CFU-E suppression by IL-17 in a dose-dependent manner. The inhibition of CFU-E by IL-17 was also corrected by exposure to higher levels of Epo. The data obtained demonstrated that at least some of the IL-17 effects in bone marrow related to the inhibition of CFU-E, were mediated by NO generation. The fact that Epo also overcomes the inhibitory effect of IL-17 on CFU-E suggests the need for further research on their mutual relationship and co-signalling.  相似文献   

13.
The effect of granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF) on the synthesis of RNA in liquid cultures of mouse bone marrow, spleen, thymus, peritoneal, peripheral blood leukocytes and lymph node cells was investigated. GM-CSF appeared to stimulate RNA-synthesis in syngeneic bone marrow cells within ten minutes of adding it to the culture. In the presence of GM-CSF bone marrow cultures maintained their initial rate of RNA synthesis for approximately ten hours. GM-CSF had no apparent effect on the uptake of 3H-uridine into bone marrow cells. This stimulation was still observed in the presence of puromycin and cycloheximide, but was abrogated by actinomycin D. The magnitude of the stimulation was not affected by the density of cells between 1 and 20 x 10(6) cells/ml but was slightly smaller at 0.1 and 40 x 10(6) cells/ml. Increasing concentration of GM-CSF (up to 2 X 105 units per ml) led to increased stimulation of RNA synthesis in bone marrow cells, but a significant stimulation could be detected at concentrations as low as 800 units/ml. GM-CSF did not significantly stimulate RNA synthesis in spleen, thymus, mesenteric or subcutaneous lymph node cells. However a small stimulation was observed in peripheral blood leukocytes and peritoneal cells. Autoradiographic studies showed that GM-CSF stimulated RNA synthesis in blast cells, myelocytes, metamyelocytes and polymorphs. Nucleated erythroid cells showed no increased labeling with GM-CFS. Labeling in lymphoid-like cells was highly variable but the level of labeling did not appear to be influenced by GM-CSF.  相似文献   

14.
The effect of various agents which are known to increase the differentiation of Friend erythroleukemia cells was investigated in cultures of mouse bone marrow cells. N,N-dimethylacetamide (5 and 15 mM) and acetamide (60 mM) significantly increased the number of erythroid colonies observed. Tetramethylurea, dimethylformamide, pyridine N-oxide, and butyric acid were ineffective. Dimethylsulfoxide at a concentration of 1% significantly increased colony number in cultures of marrow cells obtained from male mice, but had no effect in cultures of female bone marrow cells.  相似文献   

15.
Current models for regulation of heme synthesis during erythropoiesis propose that the first enzyme of the pathway, 5-aminolevulinate synthase (ALAS), is the rate-limiting enzyme. We have examined cellular porphyrin excretion in differentiating murine erythroleukemia cells to determine in situ rate-limiting steps in heme biosynthesis. The data demonstrate that low levels of coproporphyrin and protoporphyrin accumulate in the culture medium under normal growth conditions and that during erythroid differentiation the level of excretion of coproporphyrin increases approximately 100-fold. Iron supplementation lowered, but did not eliminate, porphyrin accumulation. While ALAS induction is necessary for increased heme synthesis, these data indicate that other enzymes, in particular coproporphyrinogen oxidase, represent down-stream rate-limiting steps.  相似文献   

16.
Heme inhibits transferrin endocytosis in immature erythroid cells   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The inhibitory effect of heme on iron uptake from transferrin by rat and rabbit reticulocytes and erythroid cells from the fetal rat liver was studied in vitro. Addition of hemin was shown to cause a decrease in the rate of transferrin endocytosis, the degree of inhibition being proportional to the reduction in iron uptake. The heme synthesis inhibitors, isoniazid and succinylacetone, stimulated the rate of transferrin endocytosis by 15-30% and caused a proportional increase in the rate of iron uptake, possibly by reducing the intracellular free heme concentration. It is concluded from these results that heme affects iron uptake by influencing the rate of transferrin endocytosis and recycling.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Hemin stimulates erythropoiesis and hemoglobin synthesis in vitro. We cultured erythroid progenitor cells from normal individuals, patients with sickle cell anemia, and a patient with acute variegate porphyria who received intravenous hemin treatment, with 0-800 microM hemin added in vitro. Fifty to 200 microM hemin consistently stimulated colony growth from normal donors 2- to 8-fold, while concentrations of up to 400 microM were stimulatory in cultures from donors with sickle cell anemia. In vivo hemin decreased the number of blood BFU-e in the patient with porphyria, but did not abrogate the in vitro stimulatory effect of hemin. Hemin concentrations which increased colony numbers increased gamma globin synthesis in some studies and decreased it in others. Hemin thus has clearcut erythroid growth-potentiating activity, although a consistent effect on globin chain regulation is not apparent.  相似文献   

19.
《The Journal of cell biology》1994,127(6):1743-1754
Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) is a mesenchymal derived growth factor known to induce proliferation and "scattering" of epithelial and endothelial cells. Its receptor is the tyrosine kinase encoded by the c- MET protooncogene. Here we show that highly purified recombinant HGF stimulates hemopoietic progenitors to form colonies in vitro. In the presence of erythropoietin, picomolar concentrations of HGF induced the formation of erythroid burst-forming unit colonies from CD34-positive cells purified from human bone marrow, peripheral blood, or umbilical cord blood. The growth stimulatory activity was restricted to the erythroid lineage. HGF also stimulated the formation of multipotent CFU- GEMM colonies. This effect is synergized by stem cell factor, the ligand of the tyrosine kinase receptor encoded by the c-KIT protooncogene, which is active on early hemopoietic progenitors. By flow cytometry analysis, the receptor for HGF was found to be expressed on the cell surface in a fraction of CD34+ progenitors. Moreover, in situ hybridization experiments showed that HGF receptor mRNA is highly expressed in embryonic erythroid cells (megaloblasts). HGF mRNA was also found to be produced in the embryonal liver. These data show that HGF plays a direct role in the control of proliferation and differentiation of erythroid progenitors, and they suggest that it may be one of the long-sought mediators of paracrine interactions between stromal and hemopoietic cells within the hemopoietic microenvironment.  相似文献   

20.
Heme synthesis by erythroid progenitor cells is maintained by erythropoietin (EP), insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I), and stem cell factor (SCF), and without these growth factors apoptosis (programmed cell death) occurs. To clarify the possible interaction between heme synthesis and programmed cell death of human erythroid progenitor cells, the effect of specific inhibition of heme synthesis on apoptosis of highly purified human erythroid colony forming cells (ECFC) was studied. When the amount of uncleaved DNA was determined as a measure of apoptosis, the heme synthesis inhibitors, succinylacetone (SA) (0.1 mmol/L) or isonicotinic acid hydrazide (INH) (10 mmol/L), significantly decreased the amount of uncleaved DNA (P < 0.01) in the presence of erythropoietin (EP). Addition of recombinant heavy-chain ferritin (rHF) (10 nmol/L), or deprivation of transferrin from the culture medium, which decreased heme synthesis, also reduced the amount of uncleaved DNA (P < 0.01). The production of apoptosis by diverse inhibitors of heme synthesis was in each case reversed by the addition of hemin (0.1 mmol/L) and did not occur with HL-60 cells. When the colony-forming capacity of ECFC was determined by plasma clot assay, SA, INH, or rHF reduced the number of CFU-E (P < 0.01), and the effect of SA was reversed by hemin. The addition of SA did not alter the c-myc response of ECFC to EP. These data indicate that inhibition of heme synthesis induces apoptosis of human erythroid progenitor cells, in a manner independent of an early c-myc response, and suggest that the presence of apoptosis in ineffective erythropoiesis may be secondary to impaired heme synthesis. © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

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