Journal Article
Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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Heme-dependent induction of mitophagy program during differentiation of murine erythroid cells.

Although establishment and maintenance of mitochondria are essential for the production of massive amounts of heme in erythroblasts, mitochondria must be degraded upon terminal differentiation to red blood cells (RBCs), thus creating a biphasic regulatory process. Previously, we reported that iron deficiency in mice promotes mitochondrial retention in RBCs, suggesting that a proper amount of iron and/or heme is necessary for the degradation of mitochondria during erythroblast maturation. Because the transcription factor GATA1 regulates autophagy in erythroid cells, which involves mitochondrial clearance (mitophagy), we investigated the relationship between iron or heme and mitophagy by analyzing the expression of genes related to GATA1 and autophagy and the impact of iron or heme restriction on the amount of mitochondria. We found that heme promotes the expression of GATA1-regulated mitophagy-related genes and the induction of mitophagy. GATA1 might induce the expression of the autophagy-related genes Atg4d and Stk11 for mitophagy through a heme-dependent mechanism in murine erythroleukemia (MEL) cells and a genetic rescue system with G1E-ER-GATA1 erythroblast cells derived from Gata1-null murine embryonic stem cells. These results provide evidence for a biphasic mechanism in which mitochondria are essential for heme generation, and the heme generated during differentiation promotes mitophagy and mitochondrial disposal. This mechanism provides a molecular framework for understanding this fundamentally important cell biological process.

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