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Review
. 2020 Jul 24;21(15):5263.
doi: 10.3390/ijms21155263.

An Overview of Different Strategies to Recreate the Physiological Environment in Experimental Erythropoiesis

Affiliations
Review

An Overview of Different Strategies to Recreate the Physiological Environment in Experimental Erythropoiesis

Cécile Deleschaux et al. Int J Mol Sci. .

Abstract

Human erythropoiesis is a complex process leading to the production of mature, enucleated erythrocytes (RBCs). It occurs mainly at bone marrow (BM), where hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) are engaged in the early erythroid differentiation to commit into erythroid progenitor cells (burst-forming unit erythroid (BFU-E) and colony-forming unit erythroid (CFU-E)). Then, during the terminal differentiation, several erythropoietin-induced signaling pathways trigger the differentiation of CFU-E on successive stages from pro-erythroblast to reticulocytes. The latter are released into the circulation, finalizing their maturation into functional RBCs. This process is finely regulated by the physiological environment including the erythroblast-macrophage interaction in the erythroblastic island (EBI). Several human diseases have been associated with ineffective erythropoiesis, either by a defective or an excessive production of RBCs, as well as an increase or a hemoglobinization defect. Fully understanding the production of mature red blood cells is crucial for the comprehension of erythroid pathologies as well as to the field of transfusion. Many experimental approaches have been carried out to achieve a complete differentiation in vitro to produce functional biconcave mature RBCs. However, the various protocols usually fail to achieve enough quantities of completely mature RBCs. In this review, we focus on the evolution of erythropoiesis studies over the years, taking special interest in efforts that were made to include the microenvironment and erythroblastic islands paradigm. These more physiological approaches will contribute to a deeper comprehension of erythropoiesis, improve the treatment of dyserythropoietic disorders, and break through the barriers in massive RBCs production for transfusion.

Keywords: bone marrow; erythroblastic island; erythropoiesis; experimental approaches; mesenchymal stromal cells; physiological environment.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Summary of cell to cell dialog within the erythroblastic niche. Left panel: osteoclasts, stromal cells, and epithelial cells from the sinusoids act simultaneously to maintain the pool of undifferentiated HSC. Right panel: these cells produce cytokines inducing the differentiation of erythroblasts which interact with macrophages within the erythroblastic island, promoting proliferation and terminal differentiation.

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