| Literature DB >> 12623844 |
Hannah Huddleston1, Bailin Tan, Feng-Chun Yang, Hilary White, Mary Jo Wenning, Attilio Orazi, Mervin C Yoder, Reuben Kapur, David A Ingram.
Abstract
In vitro studies suggest that activation of class IA phosphatidylinositol 3 (PI-3) kinase is necessary for normal erythroid cell development. However, when class IA PI-3 kinase-deficient mice were generated by a targeted deletion of the p85alpha regulatory subunit, fetal erythropoiesis was reportedly unaffected. Given the discrepancies between these studies, we performed a more detailed in vivo analysis of class IA PI-3 kinase-deficient embryos. Day-14.5 p85alpha-/- embryos are pale with a marked reduction of mature erythrocytes in their peripheral blood. Further, the absolute number and frequency of both early (erythroid burst-forming unit [BFU-E]) and late erythroid progenitors (erythroid colony-forming unit [CFU-E]) are reduced in p85alpha-/- fetal livers compared with wild-type controls, which is associated with reduced proliferation. Taken together, these data establish an important role for p85alpha and class IA PI-3 kinase in regulating the development of both early and late erythroid progenitors in fetal liver.Entities:
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Year: 2003 PMID: 12623844 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2002-10-3245
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113