Abstract

More than 50 years of efforts to identify the major cytokine responsible for red blood cell (RBC) production (erythropoiesis) led to the identification of erythropoietin (EPO) in 1977 and its receptor (EPOR) in 1989, followed by three decades of rich scientific discovery. We now know that an elaborate oxygen-sensing mechanism regulates the production of EPO, which in turn promotes the maturation and survival of erythroid progenitors. Engagement of the EPOR by EPO activates three interconnected signaling pathways that drive RBC production via diverse downstream effectors and simultaneously trigger negative feedback loops to suppress signaling activity. Together, the finely tuned mechanisms that drive endogenous EPO production and facilitate its downstream activities have evolved to maintain RBC levels in a narrow physiological range and to respond rapidly to erythropoietic stresses such as hypoxia or blood loss. Examination of these pathways has elucidated the genetics of numerous inherited and acquired disorders associated with deficient or excessive RBC production and generated valuable drugs to treat anemia, including recombinant human EPO and more recently the prolyl hydroxylase inhibitors, which act partly by stimulating endogenous EPO synthesis. Ongoing structure–function studies of the EPOR and its essential partner, tyrosine kinase JAK2, suggest that it may be possible to generate new “designer” drugs that control selected subsets of cytokine receptor activities for therapeutic manipulation of hematopoiesis and treatment of blood cancers.

Highlights

  • Healthy human adults produce about 200 billion red blood cells (RBCs) daily to replace those lost by senescence

  • This review focuses on recent insights into the oxygen-regulated production of EPO and its actions on post-natal bone marrow erythropoiesis

  • EPO and its receptor are essential for the differentiation of CFUE progenitors into mature RBCs

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Summary

18 Sep 2020

Faculty Reviews are review articles written by the prestigious Members of Faculty Opinions. The articles are commissioned and peer reviewed before publication to ensure that the final, published version is comprehensive and accessible. The reviewers who approved the final version are listed with their names and affiliations. 4. Vijay G Sankaran, Boston Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, USA. Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, USA Broad Institute of Harvard and Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, USA Harvard Stem Cell Institute, Cambridge, USA Any comments on the article can be found at the end of the article

Introduction
Conclusions
Koury MJ
Palis J
Erslev A
13. Kalantar-Zadeh K
20. Johnson R
22. Jelkmann W
50. Kurtz A
54. Haase VH
59. Ratcliffe PJ: HIF-1 and HIF-2
66. Bigham AW: Genetics of human origin and evolution
71. Constantinescu SN
88. Watowich SS: The erythropoietin receptor
Mohandas Narla
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