Abstract

The paper is devoted to multi-scale modelling of erythropoiesis and hemoglobin production. Red blood cells, which carry oxygen from the lungs to the other body tissues, are produced in the bone marrow of adult humans in cell units called erythroblastic islands. Erythroblastic islands are composed by a central macrophage surrounded by erythroid cells in different stages of maturation. Immature cells, the colony-forming units-erythroid, make a choice between self-renewal, differentiation and apoptosis determined by the intracellular proteins and extracellular substances. Moreover, this choice is regulated by erythropoietin and other hormones. Erythropoietin is produced in the kidney in response to hypoxia from decreased numbers of red blood cells, and it is delivered in the plasma to the bone marrow. Erythropoietin stimulates differentiation of erythroid cells and increases their proliferation by downregulating apoptosis. The rate of erythropoietin production depends on the level of hemoglobin in blood which is function of the number of circulating red blood cells. Hemoglobin is produced in the erythroid cells within the bone marrow in the process of their terminal differentiation. Thus, there is a feedback between production of red blood cells by the bone marrow, the level of hemoglobin contained in these cells and the level of erythropoietin. The multi-scale model developed in this work includes erythroid cells in the bone marrow, their intracellular and extracellular regulations, hemoglobin production, and the feedback by erythropoietin. This model describes normal functioning of erythropoiesis and its response to anemia resulting from the loss of red blood cells.

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