Abstract

The β-thalassemia syndromes are the most prevalent genetic disorder globally, characterised by reduced or absent β-globin chain synthesis. HbE/β-thalassemia is a subtype of β-thalassemia with extremely high frequency in Asia. Studying molecular defects behind β-thalassemia is severely impeded by paucity of material from patients and lack of suitable cell lines. Approaches to derive erythroid cells from induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) created from patients are confounded by poor levels of erythroid cell expansion, aberrant or incomplete erythroid differentiation and foetal/embryonic rather than adult globin expression. In this study we generate an immortalised erythroid cell line from peripheral blood stem cells of a HbE/β-thalassemia patient. Morphological analysis shows the cells are proerythroblasts with some early basophilic erythroblasts, with no change in morphology over time in culture. The line differentiates along the erythroid pathway to orthochromatic erythroblasts and reticulocytes. Importantly, unlike iPSCs, the line maintains the haemoglobin profile of the patient’s red blood cells. This is the first human cellular model for β-thalassemia providing a sustainable source of disease cells for studying underlying disease mechanisms and for use as drug screening platform, particularly for reagents designed to increase foetal haemoglobin expression as we have additionally demonstrated with hydroxyurea.

Highlights

  • The β-thalassemia syndromes are the most prevalent genetic disorder globally, characterised by reduced or absent β-globin chain synthesis

  • ◂Figure 1. (A) A schematic diagram illustrating steps in the generation of the immortalised erythroid cell line (SiBBE) from stem cells collected from blood of a patient with haemoglobin E/β-thalassemia. (B) Undifferentiated erythroid cells on day 114 in expansion medium and differentiated erythroid cells on day 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10 in erythroid differentiation medium stained with Leishman reagent and analysed by light microscopy

  • Green arrows = proerythroblasts; Blue arrows = basophilic erythroblasts; Orange arrows = polychromatic erythroblasts; black arrows = orthochromatic erythroblasts; red arrows = reticulocytes. (C) Extrapolated number of erythroid cell types at different time points during erythroid differentiation. (D) Percentage of living cells during erythroid differentiation determined by Trypan blue assay. (E) Expression of HPV16 E6, E7 and gamma globin (HBG) determined by RT-PCR

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The β-thalassemia syndromes are the most prevalent genetic disorder globally, characterised by reduced or absent β-globin chain synthesis. Morphological analysis showed the cells to be proerythroblasts with some early basophilic erythroblasts (Fig. 1B, undif., line age day 114).

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call