| Literature DB >> 24222861 |
Abstract
One of the most critical stages in mammalian embryogenesis is the independent production of the embryo's own circulating, functional red blood cells. Correspondingly, erythrocytes are the first cell type to become functionally mature during embryogenesis. Failure to achieve this invariably leads to in utero lethality. The recent application of technologies such as transcriptome analysis, flow cytometry, mutant embryo analysis, and transgenic fluorescent gene expression reporter systems has shed new light on the distinct erythroid lineages that arise early in development. Here, I will describe the similarities and differences between the distinct erythroid populations that must form for the embryo to survive. While much of the focus of this review will be the poorly understood primitive erythroid lineage, a discussion of other erythroid and hematopoietic lineages, as well as the cell types making up the different niches that give rise to these lineages, is essential for presenting an appropriate developmental context of these cells.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24222861 PMCID: PMC3814094 DOI: 10.1155/2013/568928
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ISRN Hematol ISSN: 2090-441X
Figure 1Distinct waves of red blood cell production (erythropoiesis) occur throughout ontogeny.
Figure 2In vitro differentiation of embryonic stem (ES) cells into mesodermal progenitors of the hematovascular system.
Genes critical in primitive erythropoiesis as demonstrated by null mutation.
| Gene | EryP phenotype of null mutant embryos |
|---|---|
|
| EryP show abnormal membranes with ruffled surfaces, abnormal expression of adhesion molecules, and loss of appropriate maturation markers. |
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| Embryonic lethality: Irregular shape of EryP with abnormal pseudopodia present. Reduced globin gene expression. |
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| Klf1; Klf2 compound null mutant embryos show a more severe defect than either single null mutant. |
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| Embryonic lethality; EryP show abnormal “dimples” in their cell membranes. EryP-CFC numbers unaffected. Ter-119 expression reduced by half. |
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| EryP progenitors appear arrested in development and are more proliferative than wild-type progenitors. |
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| Compound Gata1; Gata2 null mutant mice show a more severe EryP defect than single mutants. Primitive erythropoiesis is functionally absent. No |
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| Loss of inhibition of embryonic globin expression in EryD. Large, nucleated, embryonic globin-expressing cells present in circulation late in gestation. |
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| Abnormal morphology and increase in circulating binucleated and |
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| EBs lacking miR-126 fail to support erythropoiesis. Function is via VCAM1+ supporting mesenchymal cells. |
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| EpoR-Cre mice used to delete c-Myc in erythroid cells die at E12.5. Primitive erythroblasts show accelerated maturation presenting as orthochromatophilic erythroblasts when wild-type animals show basophilic erythroblasts. Nuclear condensation is accelerated in c-Myc null EryP. |
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| Fail of EryP to proliferate, increased ROS and apoptosis. |
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| Primitive erythropoieis absent from the E9.0 YS. No erythroid cells generated from |
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| EryP fail to mature and differentiate. Appear as immature megaloblastic and basophilic erythroblasts at E11.5. |
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| Fewer EryP are present at E9.5. |
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| YS devoid of EryP at E9.5 due to apoptosis. |
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| EryP-CFC absent. |
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| Mice lacking the p53-inhibitor Mdm2, but not Mdm4, develop apoptotic EryP and die at E13.5. |
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| Deletion of both adult |
References for each mutant mouse strain are in main body of text.
Changes in surface marker expression throughout the mouse primitive erythroid lifespan.
| Surface protein | Early EryP-CFC | EryP-CFC | Early circulating EryP (E9.0-11.5) | Late circulating EryP | Fetal liver EryP | Primitive retics. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Flk1 | ++ | — | — | — | ND | — |
| CD144/VE-cadherin | ++ | — | — | — | ND | — |
| Tie2 | +++ | ++++ | — | — | ND | ND |
| Endoglin | +++ | ++++ | — | — | — | — |
| CD31/PECAM | ++++ | ++++ | — | — | ND | — |
| CD41 | ++++ | ++++ | — | — | — | — |
| c-Kit | +++ | ++++ | — | — | — | — |
| CD71 | ND | ND | ++++ | +++ | +++ | + |
| Ter-119 | — | — | ++ | ++++ | ++++ | +++ |
| CD9 | ND | ND | ++++ | ++++ | ++++ | — |
| CD24 | ND | ND | ++++ | ++++ | ND | ND |
| CD55 | ND | ND | ++++ | ++++ | ND | ND |
| CD147/Basigin | ND | ND | ++++ | ++++ | ND | ++++ |
|
| ++++ | ++++ | — | + | ++++ | — |
|
| ++++ | ++++ | — | + | ++++ | — |
|
| ++++ | ++++ | — | + | ++++ | — |
| CD44 | ++++ | ++++ | — | + | ++++ | — |
| CXCR7 | ND | ND | — | +++ | ND | ND |
+Indicate relative levels of surface expression. References included in main body of text.
Figure 3The cellular composition of the embryonic blood changes profoundly as the embryo matures. Embryonic blood cells at embryonic day E13.5 are mostly primitive nucleated (magenta) Ter-119+ (yellow) erythroblasts (left panel). Three days later, nucleated erythroid cells are very rare and have been replaced by enucleated Ter-119+ definitive erythrocytes (right panel).