Erythroblastic islands: niches for erythropoiesis

JA Chasis, N Mohandas - Blood, The Journal of the American …, 2008 - ashpublications.org
JA Chasis, N Mohandas
Blood, The Journal of the American Society of Hematology, 2008ashpublications.org
Erythroblastic islands, the specialized niches in which erythroid precursors proliferate,
differentiate, and enucleate, were first described 50 years ago by analysis of transmission
electron micrographs of bone marrow. These hematopoietic subcompartments are
composed of erythroblasts surrounding a central macrophage. A hiatus of several decades
followed, during which the importance of erythroblastic islands remained unrecognized as
erythroid progenitors were shown to possess an autonomous differentiation program with a …
Abstract
Erythroblastic islands, the specialized niches in which erythroid precursors proliferate, differentiate, and enucleate, were first described 50 years ago by analysis of transmission electron micrographs of bone marrow. These hematopoietic subcompartments are composed of erythroblasts surrounding a central macrophage. A hiatus of several decades followed, during which the importance of erythroblastic islands remained unrecognized as erythroid progenitors were shown to possess an autonomous differentiation program with a capacity to complete terminal differentiation in vitro in the presence of erythropoietin but without macrophages. However, as the extent of proliferation, differentiation, and enucleation efficiency documented in vivo could not be recapitulated in vitro, a resurgence of interest in erythroid niches has emerged. We now have an increased molecular understanding of processes operating within erythroid niches, including cell-cell and cell-extracellular matrix adhesion, positive and negative regulatory feedback, and central macrophage function. These features of erythroblast islands represent important contributors to normal erythroid development, as well as altered erythropoiesis found in such diverse diseases as anemia of inflammation and chronic disease, myelodysplasia, thalassemia, and malarial anemia. Coupling of historical, current, and future insights will be essential to understand the tightly regulated production of red cells both in steady state and stress erythropoiesis.
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