Abstract
A reliable cell line capable of robust in vitro erythroid differentiation would be useful to investigate red blood cell (RBC) biology and genetic strategies for RBC diseases. K562 cells are widely utilized for erythroid differentiation; however, current differentiation methods are insufficient to analyze globin proteins. In this study, we sought to improve erythroid differentiation from K562 cells to enable protein-level globin analysis. K562 cells were exposed to a variety of reagents, including hemin, rapamycin, imatinib, and/or decitabine (known erythroid inducers), and cultured in a basic culture medium or erythropoietin-based differentiation medium. All single reagents induced observable erythroid differentiation with higher glycophorin A (GPA) expression but were insufficient to produce detectable globin proteins. We then evaluated various combinations of these reagents and developed a method incorporating imatinib preexposure and an erythropoietin-based differentiation culture containing both rapamycin and decitabine capable of efficient erythroid differentiation, high-level GPA expression (>90%), and high-level globin production at protein levels detectable by hemoglobin electrophoresis and high performance liquid chromatography. In addition, β-globin gene transfer resulted in detectable adult hemoglobin. In summary, we developed an in vitro K562 erythroid differentiation model with high-level globin production. This model provides a practical evaluation tool for hemoglobin production in human erythroid cells.
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