4.7 Article

EPO-mediated expansion of late-stage erythroid progenitors in the bone marrow initiates recovery from sublethal radiation stress

Journal

BLOOD
Volume 120, Issue 12, Pages 2501-2511

Publisher

AMER SOC HEMATOLOGY
DOI: 10.1182/blood-2011-11-394304

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Funding

  1. University of Rochester Medical Center Flow Core
  2. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) [R01 AI080401]
  3. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases [F30 DK085706]
  4. NIAID Center for Medical Countermeasures against Radiation Program [U19 AI067733, U19 AI091036-1]
  5. Michael Napoleone Foundation
  6. National Institutes of Health [T32GM07356]

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Erythropoiesis is a robust process of cellular expansion and maturation occurring in murine bone marrow and spleen. We previously determined that sublethal irradiation, unlike bleeding or hemolysis, depletes almost all marrow and splenic erythroblasts but leaves peripheral erythrocytes intact. To better understand the erythroid stress response, we analyzed progenitor, precursor, and peripheral blood compartments of mice post-4 Gy total body irradiation. Erythroid recovery initiates with rapid expansion of late-stage erythroid progenitors-day 3 burst-forming units and colony-forming units, associated with markedly increased plasma erythropoietin (EPO). Although initial expansion of late-stage erythroid progenitors is dependent on EPO, this cellular compartment becomes sharply down-regulated despite elevated EPO levels. Loss of EPO-responsive progenitors is associated temporally with a wave of maturing erythroid precursors in marrow and with emergence of circulating erythroid progenitors and subsequent reestablishment of splenic erythropoiesis. These circulating progenitors selectively engraft and mature in irradiated spleen after short-term transplantation, supporting the concept that bone marrow erythroid progenitors migrate to spleen. We conclude that sublethal radiation is a unique model of endogenous stress erythropoiesis, with specific injury to the extravascular erythron, expansion and maturation of EPO-responsive late-stage progenitors exclusively in marrow, and subsequent reseeding of extramedullary sites. (Blood. 2012;120(12):2501-2511)

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