| Literature DB >> 35349664 |
Raymond T Doty1, Xing Fan2, David J Young2, Jialiu Liang2, Komudi Singh2, Zahra Pakbaz2,3, Ronan Desmond2,4, Sara K Young-Baird5,6, Settara C Chandrasekharappa7, Frank X Donovan7, Susan R Phelps1, Thomas Winkler2, Cynthia E Dunbar2, Janis L Abkowitz1.
Abstract
We follow a patient with Diamond-Blackfan anemia (DBA) mosaic for a pathogenic RPS19 haploinsufficiency mutation with persistent transfusion-dependent anemia. Her anemia remitted on eltrombopag (EPAG), but surprisingly, mosaicism was unchanged, suggesting that both mutant and normal cells responded. When EPAG was withheld, her anemia returned. In addition to expanding hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells, EPAG aggressively chelates iron. Because DBA anemia, at least in part, results from excessive intracellular heme leading to ferroptotic cell death, we hypothesized that the excess heme accumulating in ribosomal protein-deficient erythroid precursors inhibited the growth of adjacent genetically normal precursors, and that the efficacy of EPAG reflected its ability to chelate iron, limit heme synthesis, and thus limit toxicity in both mutant and normal cells. To test this, we studied Rpl11 haploinsufficient (DBA) mice and mice chimeric for the cytoplasmic heme export protein, FLVCR. Flvcr1-deleted mice have severe anemia, resembling DBA. Mice transplanted with ratios of DBA to wild-type marrow cells of 50:50 are anemic, like our DBA patient. In contrast, mice transplanted with Flvcr1-deleted (unable to export heme) and wild-type marrow cells at ratios of 50:50 or 80:20 have normal numbers of red cells. Additional studies suggest that heme exported from DBA erythroid cells might impede the nurse cell function of central macrophages of erythroblastic islands to impair the maturation of genetically normal coadherent erythroid cells. These findings have implications for the gene therapy of DBA and may provide insights into why del(5q) myelodysplastic syndrome patients are anemic despite being mosaic for chromosome 5q deletion and loss of RPS14.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35349664 PMCID: PMC9185154 DOI: 10.1182/blood.2021013507
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 25.476