Abstract
We measured steady-state levels of the human globin mRNAs in liver samples from several mid-gestational fetuses. RNA from the ε, γ, β, ζ, θ, and α globin genes were present in fetal liver samples isolated from 10-25-wk embryos. The abundance of all human globin mRNAs declined in older fetuses, presumably because of a gradual reduction in the proportion of erythroid precursors in the liver as development procedes. The γ:β globin mRNA ratio in 10-18-wk fetal erythroblasts was 6-7:1, and in adult erythroid bone marrow the ratio was 0.02:1. In fetal liver samples, the relative abundance of ε transcripts was < 1% that of γ, and ζ transcripts < 5% that of α. Embryonic transcripts declined in abundance during late fetal development and were not detected in newborn liver or adult erythroid bone marrow. θ globin mRNA also represented a minor species (< 1% that of α) in fetal liver samples, but in contrast to the embryonic mRNAs, was most abundant in adult marrow samples obtained from patients with erythroid hyperplasia. These results support the hypothesis that globin protein levels are regulated by the relative amounts of each globin mRNA at various stages of erythropoietic development.
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CITATION STYLE
Ley, T. J., Maloney, K. A., Gordon, J. I., & Schwartz, A. L. (1989). Globin gene expression in erythroid human fetal liver cells. Journal of Clinical Investigation, 83(3), 1032–1038. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI113944
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