4.6 Article

Haem-regulated eIF2α kinase is necessary for adaptive gene expression in erythroid precursors under the stress of iron deficiency

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF HAEMATOLOGY
Volume 143, Issue 1, Pages 129-137

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2141.2008.07293.x

Keywords

iron and haem; erythroid differentiation; eIF2 alpha kinase; Gata1 and Fog1; gene expression

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Funding

  1. NIH [DK16272]
  2. Cooley's Anemia Foundation

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Haem-regulated eIF2 alpha kinase (HRI) is essential for the regulation of globin gene translation and the survival of erythroid precursors in iron/haem deficiency. This study found that that in iron deficiency, fetal definitive erythropoiesis is inhibited at the basophilic erythroblast stage with increased proliferation and elevated apoptosis. This hallmark of ineffective erythropoiesis is more severe in HRI deficiency. Microarray gene profiling analysis showed that HRI was required for adaptive gene expression in erythroid precursors during chronic iron deficiency. The number of genes with expression affected more than twofold increased, from 213 in iron deficiency and 73 in HRI deficiency, to 3135 in combined iron and HRI deficiencies. Many of these genes are regulated by Gata1 and Fog1. We demonstrate for the first time that Gata1 expression in developing erythroid precursors is decreased in iron deficiency, and is decreased further in combined iron and HRI deficiencies. Additionally, Fog1 expression is decreased in combined deficiencies, but not in iron or HRI deficiency alone. Our results indicate that HRI confers adaptive gene expression in developing erythroblasts during iron deficiency through maintaining Gata1/Fog1 expression.

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