4.8 Article

Centrosome function is critical during terminal erythroid differentiation

Journal

EMBO JOURNAL
Volume 41, Issue 14, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.15252/embj.2021108739

Keywords

blood; centrosome; enucleation; erythropoiesis; mitotic spindle

Funding

  1. Cancer Research UK [C14303/A17197, A24455]

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This study shows the critical role of CDK5RAP2 and centrosomes in spindle formation during blood production. Lack of CDK5RAP2 leads to defective erythroid differentiation and the emergence of macrocytic anemia. The study suggests that disruption of centrosome and spindle function could contribute to the development of macrocytic anemias.
Red blood cells are produced by terminal erythroid differentiation, which involves the dramatic morphological transformation of erythroblasts into enucleated reticulocytes. Microtubules are important for enucleation, but it is not known if the centrosome, a key microtubule-organizing center, is required as well. Mice lacking the conserved centrosome component, CDK5RAP2, are likely to have defective erythroid differentiation because they develop macrocytic anemia. Here, we show that fetal liver-derived, CDK5RAP2-deficient erythroid progenitors generate fewer and larger reticulocytes, hence recapitulating features of macrocytic anemia. In erythroblasts, but not in embryonic fibroblasts, loss of CDK5RAP2 or pharmacological depletion of centrosomes leads to highly aberrant spindle morphologies. Consistent with such cells exiting mitosis without chromosome segregation, tetraploidy is frequent in late-stage erythroblasts, thereby giving rise to fewer but larger reticulocytes than normal. Our results define a critical role for CDK5RAP2 and centrosomes in spindle formation specifically during blood production. We propose that disruption of centrosome and spindle function could contribute to the emergence of macrocytic anemias, for instance, due to nutritional deficiency or exposure to chemotherapy.

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