PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Effect of AGM and fetal liver-derived stromal cell lines on globin expression in adult baboon (P. anubis) bone marrow-derived erythroid progenitors.

  • Donald Lavelle,
  • Kestutis Vaitkus,
  • Maria Armila Ruiz,
  • Vinzon Ibanez,
  • Tatiana Kouznetsova,
  • Yogen Saunthararajah,
  • Nadim Mahmud,
  • Joseph DeSimone

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0036846
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 5
p. e36846

Abstract

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This study was performed to investigate the hypothesis that the erythroid micro-environment plays a role in regulation of globin gene expression during adult erythroid differentiation. Adult baboon bone marrow and human cord blood CD34+ progenitors were grown in methylcellulose, liquid media, and in co-culture with stromal cell lines derived from different developmental stages in identical media supporting erythroid differentiation to examine the effect of the micro-environment on globin gene expression. Adult progenitors express high levels of γ-globin in liquid and methylcellulose media but low, physiological levels in stromal cell co-cultures. In contrast, γ-globin expression remained high in cord blood progenitors in stromal cell line co-cultures. Differences in γ-globin gene expression between adult progenitors in stromal cell line co-cultures and liquid media required cell-cell contact and were associated with differences in rate of differentiation and γ-globin promoter DNA methylation. We conclude that γ-globin expression in adult-derived erythroid cells can be influenced by the micro-environment, suggesting new potential targets for HbF induction.