Cell Death and Disease (Oct 2022)

The accumulation of miR-125b-5p is indispensable for efficient erythroblast enucleation

  • Fang Fang,
  • Lei Xu,
  • Liqing Liang,
  • Mingyi Qu,
  • Hailei Yao,
  • Wen Yue,
  • Lin Chen,
  • Dongli Chen,
  • Zeng Fan,
  • Lijuan He,
  • Xue Nan,
  • Huanhuan Zhang,
  • Xiaoyan Xie,
  • Xuetao Pei

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41419-022-05331-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 10
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Erythroblast enucleation is a precisely regulated but not clearly understood process. Polycythemia shows pathological erythroblast enucleation, and we discovered a low miR-125b-5p level in terminal erythroblasts of patients with polycythemia vera (PV) compared to those of healthy controls. Exogenous upregulation of miR-125b-5p levels restored the enucleation rate to normal levels. Direct downregulation of miR-125b-5p in mouse erythroblasts simulated the enucleation issue found in patients with PV, and miR-125b-5p accumulation was found in enucleating erythroblasts, collectively suggesting the importance of miR-125b-5p accumulation for erythroblast enucleation. To elucidate the role of miR-125b-5p in enucleation, gain- and loss-of-function studies were performed. Overexpression of miR-125b-5p improved the enucleation of erythroleukemia cells and primary erythroblasts. Infused erythroblasts with higher levels of miR-125b-5p also exhibited accelerated enucleation. In contrast, miR-125b-5p inhibitors significantly suppressed erythrocyte enucleation. Intracellular imaging revealed that in addition to cytoskeletal assembly and nuclear condensation, miR-125b-5p overexpression resulted in mitochondrial reduction and depolarization. Real-time PCR, western blot analysis, luciferase reporter assays, small molecule inhibitor supplementation and gene rescue assays revealed that Bcl-2, as a direct target of miR-125b-5p, was one of the key mediators of miR-125b-5p during enucleation. Following suppression of Bcl-2, the activation of caspase-3 and subsequent activation of ROCK-1 resulted in cytoskeletal rearrangement and enucleation. In conclusion, this study is the first to reveal the pivotal role of miR-125b-5p in erythroblast enucleation.