4.7 Review

Erythroblastic Island Macrophages Shape Normal Erythropoiesis and Drive Associated Disorders in Erythroid Hematopoietic Diseases

Journal

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2020.613885

Keywords

EBI macrophages; erythropoiesis; central macrophages; EPOR; erythroid hematopoietic disorders; β -thalassemia; polycythemia vera

Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of China [82000112]
  2. Henan Province Medical Science and Technology Research Project [201701004]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Erythroblastic islands (EBIs) are specialized microenvironments for erythropoiesis, consisting of a central macrophage and developing erythroid cells. EBI macrophages play a crucial role in supporting erythropoiesis, and dysfunction may lead to certain erythroid hematological disorders.
Erythroblastic islands (EBIs), discovered more than 60 years ago, are specialized microenvironments for erythropoiesis. This island consists of a central macrophage with surrounding developing erythroid cells. EBI macrophages have received intense interest in the verifications of the supporting erythropoiesis hypothesis. Most of these investigations have focused on the identification and functional analyses of EBI macrophages, yielding significant progresses in identifying and isolating EBI macrophages, as well as verifying the potential roles of EBI macrophages in erythropoiesis. EBI macrophages express erythropoietin receptor (Epor) both in mouse and human, and Epo acts on both erythroid cells and EBI macrophages simultaneously in the niche, thereby promoting erythropoiesis. Impaired Epor signaling in splenic niche macrophages significantly inhibit the differentiation of stress erythroid progenitors. Moreover, accumulating evidence suggests that EBI macrophage dysfunction may lead to certain erythroid hematological disorders. In this review, the heterogeneity, identification, and functions of EBI macrophages during erythropoiesis under both steady-state and stress conditions are outlined. By reviewing the historical data, we discuss the influence of EBI macrophages on erythroid hematopoietic disorders and propose a new hypothesis that erythroid hematopoietic disorders are driven by EBI macrophages.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available