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Publication : "Maturational" globin switching in primary primitive erythroid cells.

First Author  Kingsley PD Year  2006
Journal  Blood Volume  107
Issue  4 Pages  1665-72
PubMed ID  16263786 Mgi Jnum  J:133333
Mgi Id  MGI:3778271 Doi  10.1182/blood-2005-08-3097
Citation  Kingsley PD, et al. (2006) 'Maturational' globin switching in primary primitive erythroid cells. Blood 107(4):1665-72
abstractText  Mammals have 2 distinct erythroid lineages. The primitive erythroid lineage originates in the yolk sac and generates a cohort of large erythroblasts that terminally differentiate in the bloodstream. The definitive erythroid lineage generates smaller enucleated erythrocytes that become the predominant cell in fetal and postnatal circulation. These lineages also have distinct globin expression patterns. Our studies in primary murine primitive erythroid cells indicate that betaH1 is the predominant beta-globin transcript in the early yolk sac. Thus, unlike the human, murine beta-globin genes are not up-regulated in the order of their chromosomal arrangement. As primitive erythroblasts mature from proerythroblasts to reticulocytes, they undergo a betaH1- to epsilony-globin switch, up-regulate adult beta1- and beta2-globins, and down-regulate zeta-globin. These changes in transcript levels correlate with changes in RNA polymerase II density at their promoters and transcribed regions. Furthermore, the epsilony- and betaH1-globin genes in primitive erythroblasts reside within a single large hyperacetylated domain. These data suggest that this 'maturational' betaH1- to epsilony-globin switch is dynamically regulated at the transcriptional level. Globin switching during ontogeny is due not only to the sequential appearance of primitive and definitive lineages but also to changes in globin expression as primitive erythroblasts mature in the bloodstream.
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