PPAR-α and glucocorticoid receptor synergize to promote erythroid progenitor self-renewal

HY Lee, X Gao, MI Barrasa, H Li, RR Elmes, LL Peters… - Nature, 2015 - nature.com
HY Lee, X Gao, MI Barrasa, H Li, RR Elmes, LL Peters, HF Lodish
Nature, 2015nature.com
Many acute and chronic anaemias, including haemolysis, sepsis and genetic bone marrow
failure diseases such as Diamond–Blackfan anaemia, are not treatable with erythropoietin
(Epo), because the colony-forming unit erythroid progenitors (CFU-Es) that respond to Epo
are either too few in number or are not sensitive enough to Epo to maintain sufficient red
blood cell production,,,,,,,,. Treatment of these anaemias requires a drug that acts at an
earlier stage of red cell formation and enhances the formation of Epo-sensitive CFU-E …
Abstract
Many acute and chronic anaemias, including haemolysis, sepsis and genetic bone marrow failure diseases such as Diamond–Blackfan anaemia, are not treatable with erythropoietin (Epo), because the colony-forming unit erythroid progenitors (CFU-Es) that respond to Epo are either too few in number or are not sensitive enough to Epo to maintain sufficient red blood cell production,,,,,,,,. Treatment of these anaemias requires a drug that acts at an earlier stage of red cell formation and enhances the formation of Epo-sensitive CFU-E progenitors. Recently, we showed that glucocorticoids specifically stimulate self-renewal of an early erythroid progenitor, burst-forming unit erythroid (BFU-E), and increase the production of terminally differentiated erythroid cells,. Here we show that activation of the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor α (PPAR-α) by the PPAR-α agonists GW7647 and fenofibrate synergizes with the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) to promote BFU-E self-renewal. Over time these agonists greatly increase production of mature red blood cells in cultures of both mouse fetal liver BFU-Es and mobilized human adult CD34+ peripheral blood progenitors, with a new and effective culture system being used for the human cells that generates normal enucleated reticulocytes. Although Ppara−/− mice show no haematological difference from wild-type mice in both normal and phenylhydrazine (PHZ)-induced stress erythropoiesis, PPAR-α agonists facilitate recovery of wild-type but not Ppara−/− mice from PHZ-induced acute haemolytic anaemia. We also show that PPAR-α alleviates anaemia in a mouse model of chronic anaemia. Finally, both in control and corticosteroid-treated BFU-E cells, PPAR-α co-occupies many chromatin sites with GR; when activated by PPAR-α agonists, additional PPAR-α is recruited to GR-adjacent sites and presumably facilitates GR-dependent BFU-E self-renewal. Our discovery of the role of PPAR-α agonists in stimulating self-renewal of early erythroid progenitor cells suggests that the clinically tested PPAR-α agonists we used may improve the efficacy of corticosteroids in treating Epo-resistant anaemias.
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