Incidence of Variants of Human Red Cell NADH Diaphorase in Japanese Newborns and Coordinate Developmental Changes of Its Activity with Fetal Hemoglobin and F Cells

Neonatology ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 46 (6) ◽  
pp. 261-266
Author(s):  
Koji Shimizu ◽  
Hiromi Keino ◽  
Akira Mizutani
Blood ◽  
1977 ◽  
Vol 50 (2) ◽  
pp. 249-258 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Pagnier ◽  
M Lopez ◽  
C Mathiot ◽  
B Habibi ◽  
P Zamet ◽  
...  

Abstract A high level of fetal hemoglobin was found in an 8-yr-old boy without any hematologic disorders except for a moderate anemia. The absence of hemoglobin abnormalities in the parents led us to suspect a latent malignant disease that, on follow-up, was confirmed to be myelomonocytic leukemia. Hemoglobin biosynthetic studies provided evidence of unbalanced synthesis of globin subunits by reticulocytes, while the production of non-alpha chains was equal to that of alpha chains in bone marrow cells. The expression of red cell antigen i was increased, while those of I, A, and A1 antigens were found to decrease progressively. Two populations of erythrocytes, A-positive and A- negative, were distinguished and could be separated by differential agglutination. Unbalanced globin chain synthesis, increased fetal hemoglobin, and antigenic changes of the membrane were shown to be restricted to the A-negative population. The biologic data were not entirely consistent with a genuine reversion to fetal erythropoiesis. The question remains of a polychromosomal lesion of either quiescent F cells or adult stem cells.


Blood ◽  
1978 ◽  
Vol 52 (4) ◽  
pp. 664-672 ◽  
Author(s):  
GJ Dover ◽  
SH Boyer ◽  
WR Bell

Abstract Fetal hemoglobin (HbF)-bearing reticulocytes (F reticulocytes) can be detected in peripheral blood by a modification of the microscopic single-cell radial immunodiffusion method. Thereby otherwise inappreciable changes in HbF production can readily be recognized. F reticulocyte frequencies are reporducibly measurable whenever the product of whole blood HbF-bearing red cell (F cell) frequency and reticulocyte frequency is approximately 5 X 10(-4) or greater. Serial analyses of F reticulocytes and nonreticulocyte F cells (F erythrocytes) illustrate that (1) levels of F reticulocytes and F erythrocytes are persistently similar in normal adults with more than 6% F cells and thus cell survival times of F and non-F cells must be essentially the same, (2) changing levels of F reticulocytes can be sensitive predictors of later changes in mature F cell frequencies during infancy and in adults recovering from aplastic anemia, and (3) alterations in F reticulocyte frequency and the amount of HbF per F reticulocyte are discordant in some settings but concordant in others.


Blood ◽  
1977 ◽  
Vol 50 (2) ◽  
pp. 249-258
Author(s):  
J Pagnier ◽  
M Lopez ◽  
C Mathiot ◽  
B Habibi ◽  
P Zamet ◽  
...  

A high level of fetal hemoglobin was found in an 8-yr-old boy without any hematologic disorders except for a moderate anemia. The absence of hemoglobin abnormalities in the parents led us to suspect a latent malignant disease that, on follow-up, was confirmed to be myelomonocytic leukemia. Hemoglobin biosynthetic studies provided evidence of unbalanced synthesis of globin subunits by reticulocytes, while the production of non-alpha chains was equal to that of alpha chains in bone marrow cells. The expression of red cell antigen i was increased, while those of I, A, and A1 antigens were found to decrease progressively. Two populations of erythrocytes, A-positive and A- negative, were distinguished and could be separated by differential agglutination. Unbalanced globin chain synthesis, increased fetal hemoglobin, and antigenic changes of the membrane were shown to be restricted to the A-negative population. The biologic data were not entirely consistent with a genuine reversion to fetal erythropoiesis. The question remains of a polychromosomal lesion of either quiescent F cells or adult stem cells.


Blood ◽  
1978 ◽  
Vol 52 (4) ◽  
pp. 664-672 ◽  
Author(s):  
GJ Dover ◽  
SH Boyer ◽  
WR Bell

Fetal hemoglobin (HbF)-bearing reticulocytes (F reticulocytes) can be detected in peripheral blood by a modification of the microscopic single-cell radial immunodiffusion method. Thereby otherwise inappreciable changes in HbF production can readily be recognized. F reticulocyte frequencies are reporducibly measurable whenever the product of whole blood HbF-bearing red cell (F cell) frequency and reticulocyte frequency is approximately 5 X 10(-4) or greater. Serial analyses of F reticulocytes and nonreticulocyte F cells (F erythrocytes) illustrate that (1) levels of F reticulocytes and F erythrocytes are persistently similar in normal adults with more than 6% F cells and thus cell survival times of F and non-F cells must be essentially the same, (2) changing levels of F reticulocytes can be sensitive predictors of later changes in mature F cell frequencies during infancy and in adults recovering from aplastic anemia, and (3) alterations in F reticulocyte frequency and the amount of HbF per F reticulocyte are discordant in some settings but concordant in others.


Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 135 (22) ◽  
pp. 1957-1968 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eugene Khandros ◽  
Peng Huang ◽  
Scott A. Peslak ◽  
Malini Sharma ◽  
Osheiza Abdulmalik ◽  
...  

Abstract Reversing the developmental switch from fetal hemoglobin (HbF, α2γ2) to adult hemoglobin (HbA, α2β2) is an important therapeutic approach in sickle cell disease (SCD) and β-thalassemia. In healthy individuals, SCD patients, and patients treated with pharmacologic HbF inducers, HbF is present only in a subset of red blood cells known as F cells. Despite more than 50 years of observations, the cause for this heterocellular HbF expression pattern, even among genetically identical cells, remains unknown. Adult F cells might represent a reversion of a given cell to a fetal-like epigenetic and transcriptional state. Alternatively, isolated transcriptional or posttranscriptional events at the γ-globin genes might underlie heterocellularity. Here, we set out to understand the heterogeneity of HbF activation by developing techniques to purify and profile differentiation stage-matched late erythroblast F cells and non–F cells (A cells) from the human HUDEP2 erythroid cell line and primary human erythroid cultures. Transcriptional and proteomic profiling of these cells demonstrated very few differences between F and A cells at the RNA level either under baseline conditions or after treatment with HbF inducers hydroxyurea or pomalidomide. Surprisingly, we did not find differences in expression of any known HbF regulators, including BCL11A or LRF, that would account for HbF activation. Our analysis shows that F erythroblasts are not significantly different from non-HbF–expressing cells and that the primary differences likely occur at the transcriptional level at the β-globin locus.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1967 ◽  
Vol 39 (5) ◽  
pp. 675-688
Author(s):  
Denis R. Miller ◽  
Robert L. Baehner ◽  
Louis K. Diamond

Two cases of PNH in adolescence and childhood are reported. The first presented at age 7½ years with aplastic anemia and improved after splenectomy performed at age 14. The second, a 15-year-old girl, presented with a Coombs-positive hemolytic anemia and has had a course complicated by multiple peripheral thromboses. The clinical and laboratory manifestations, complications, and certain therapeutic aspects of PNH are discussed. Anticoagulant therapy appears indicated in the presence of multiple thrombotic episodes. Erythrocyte metabolic studies revealed normal glycolysis, ATP stability, and GSH content in the cells of a child with a normal reticulocyte count. Mild elevations of glycolysis, noted in the child with a reticulocytosis, was ascribed to a younger mean red cell population since further elevations found in the "top" reticulocyte-rich layer after centrifugation. Heparin, the anticoagulant used in these studies, had no adverse effect on glycolysis but did inhibit hemolysis and minimize ATP instability when compared to cells suspended in defibrinated serum. Erythrocytes fractionated by centrifugation revealed increased glycolytic enzyme activities of hexokinase, G3PD, PGK, TPI, PK, LDH, G6PD, and 6PGD in the reticulocyte-rich layer. Normal, rather than increased activity of aldolase, a membrane enzyme, may reflect damage to the red cell membrane. PFK, known to be decreased in the erythrocyte of neonates, showed normal activity, but it was lowest in the reticulocyte-rich layer. Fetal hemoglobin was elevated in this layer. AChE deficiency and increased suceptibility to hydrogen perioxide and acid hemolysis confirmed previous reports and were most marked in the young cell layer. The level of increased glycolytic rates and enzyme activity, AChE deficiency, acid hemolysis and peroxide hemolysis were related to the clinical severity of the disease.


Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 136 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 14-15
Author(s):  
Sara El Hoss ◽  
Sylvie Cochet ◽  
Auria Godard ◽  
Hongxia Yan ◽  
Michaël Dussiot ◽  
...  

Sickle cell disease (SCD) is an autosomal hereditary recessive disorder caused by a point mutation in the β globin gene resulting in a Glu-to-Val substitution at the 6th position of the β globin protein. The resulting abnormal hemoglobin (HbS) polymerizes under hypoxic conditions driving red blood cell (RBC) sickling (Pauling et al., 1949). While pathobiology of circulating RBCs has been extensively analyzed in SCD, erythropoiesis is surprisingly poorly documented. In β-thalassemia, ineffective erythropoiesis is characterized by high levels of apoptotic erythroblasts during the late stages of terminal differentiation, due to an accumulation of free β-globin chains (Arlet et al., 2016). Ineffective erythropoiesis is the major cause of anemia in β-thalassemia patients. In contrast, a marked decrease in life span of circulating red cells, a feature of sickle red cells, is considered to be the major determinant of chronic anemia in SCD. It is generally surmised that ineffective erythropoiesis contributes little to anemia. The bone marrow environment has been well documented to be hypoxic (0.1 to 6% O2) (Mantel et al., 2015). As hypoxia induces HbS polymerization, we hypothesized that cell death may occur in vivo because of HbS polymer formation in the late stages of differentiation characterized by high intracellular hemoglobin concentration. In the present study, using both in vitro and in vivo derived human erythroblasts we assessed the extent of ineffective erythropoiesis in SCD. We explored the mechanistic basis of the ineffective erythropoiesis in SCD using biochemical, cellular and imaging techniques. In vitro erythroid differentiation using CD34+ cells isolated from SCD patients and from healthy donors was performed. A 2-phase erythroid differentiation protocol was used and cultures were performed at two different oxygen conditions, i.e. normoxia and partial hypoxia (5% O2). We found that hypoxia induces cell death of sickle erythroblasts starting at the polychromatic stage, positively selecting cells with high levels of fetal hemoglobin (HbF). This inference was supported by flow cytometry data showing higher percentages of dead cells within the non-F-cell population as compared to the F-cell population for SCD cells. Moreover, SCD dead cells showed higher levels of chaperon protein HSP70 in the cytoplasm than live cells, while no difference was detected between both subpopulations for control cells, suggesting that cell death of SCD erythroblasts was probably due to HSP70 cytoplasmic sequestration. This was supported by western-blot experiments showing less HSP70 in the nucleus of SCD erythroblasts under hypoxia, associated with decreased levels of GATA-1. At the molecular level, HSP70 was co-immunoprecipitated with HbS under hypoxia indicating that both proteins were in the same complex and suggesting interaction between HSP70 and HbS polymers in the cyotplasm. Importantly, we confirm these results in vivo by showing that in bone marrow of SCD patients (n = 5) cell loss occurs during terminal erythroid differentiation, with a significant drop in the cell count between the polychromatic and the orthochromatic stages (Figure 1). In order to specifically address the role of HbF in cell survival, we used a CRISPR-Cas9 approach to mimic the effect of hereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobin (HPFH). CD34+ cells were transfected either with a gRNA targeting the LRF binding site (-197) or a gRNA targeting an unrelated locus (AAVS1) (Weber, Frati, et al. 2020). As expected, the disruption of the LRF binding site resulted in HbF induction as shown by higher %F-cells compared to AAVS1 control. These higher levels of F-cells resulted in decreased apoptosis, under both normoxic and hypoxic conditions, clearly demonstrating the positive and selective effect of HbF on SCD cell survival (Figure 2). In summary, our study shows that HbF has a dual beneficial effect in SCD by conferring a preferential survival of F-cells in the circulation and by decreasing ineffective erythropoiesis. These findings thus bring new insights into the role of HbF in modulating clinical severity of anemia in SCD by both regulating red cell production and red cell destruction. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Author(s):  
H. C. Schwartz ◽  
T. J. Gribble ◽  
F. Welland ◽  
W. Nijhof ◽  
J. H. P. Jonxis

Blood ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 85 (4) ◽  
pp. 1111-1117 ◽  
Author(s):  
YC Chang ◽  
KD Smith ◽  
RD Moore ◽  
GR Serjeant ◽  
GJ Dover

Five factors have been shown to influence the 20-fold variation of fetal hemoglobin (Hb F) levels in sickle cell anemia (SS): age, sex, the alpha-globin gene number, beta-globin haplotypes, and an X-linked locus that regulates the production of Hb F-containing erythrocytes (F cells), ie, the F-cell production (FCP) locus. To determine the relative importance of these factors, we studied 257 Jamaican SS subjects from a Cohort group identified by newborn screening and from a Sib Pair study. Linear regression analyses showed that each variable, when analyzed alone, had a significant association with Hb F levels (P < .05). Multiple regression analysis, including all variables, showed that the FCP locus is the strongest predictor, accounting for 40% of Hb F variation. beta-Globin haplotypes, alpha-globin genes, and age accounted for less than 10% of the variation. The association between the beta-globin haplotypes and Hb F levels becomes apparent if the influence of the FCP locus is removed by analyzing only individuals with the same FCP phenotype. Thus, the FCP locus is the most important factor identified to date in determining Hb F levels. The variation within each FCP phenotype is modulated by factors associated with the three common beta-globin haplotypes and other as yet unidentified factor(s).


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