Hydroxyurea responsiveness in β-thalassemic patients is determined by the stress response adaptation of erythroid progenitors and their differentiation propensity

Farzin Pourfarzad, Marieke von Lindern, Azita Azarkeivan, Jun Hou, Sima Kheradmand Kia, Fatemehsadat Esteghamat, Wilfred van Ijcken, Sjaak Philipsen, Hossein Najmabadi, Frank Grosveld

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45 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

β-thalassemia is caused by mutations in the β-globin locus resulting in loss of, or reduced, hemoglobin A (adult hemoglobin, HbA, α2β2) production. Hydroxyurea treatment increases fetal γ-globin (fetal hemoglobin, HbF, α2γ2) expression in postnatal life substituting for the missing adult β-globin and is, therefore, an attractive therapeutic approach. Patients treated with hydroxyurea fall into three categories: i) 'responders' who increase hemoglobin to therapeutic levels; (ii) 'moderate-responders' who increase hemoglobin levels but still need transfusions at longer intervals; and (iii) 'non-responders' who do not reach adequate hemoglobin levels and remain transfusion-dependent. The mechanisms underlying these differential responses remain largely unclear. We generated RNA expression profiles from erythroblast progenitors of 8 responder and 8 non-responder β-thalassemia patients. These profiles revealed that hydroxyurea treatment induced differential expression of many genes in cells from non-responders while it had little impact on cells from responders. Part of the gene program up-regulated by hydroxyurea in non-responders was already highly expressed in responders before hydroxyurea treatment. Baseline HbF expression was low in non-responders, and hydroxyurea treatment induced significant cell death. We conclude that cells from responders have adapted well to constitutive stress conditions and display a propensity to proceed to the erythroid differentiation program
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)696-704
JournalHaematologica
Volume98
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2013

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