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Acute blood loss in mice forces differentiation of both CD45-positive and CD45-negative erythroid cells and leads to a decreased CCL3 chemokine production by bone marrow erythroid cells.

Kirill NazarovRoman Perik-ZavodskiiOlga Y Perik-ZavodskaiaSaleh AlrhmounMarina VolynetsJulia ShevchenkoSergey V Sennikov
Published in: PloS one (2024)
Hemorrhage, a condition that accompanies most physical trauma cases, remains an important field of study, a field that has been extensively studied in the immunological context for myeloid and lymphoid cells, but not as much for erythroid cells. In this study, we studied the immunological response of murine erythroid cells to acute blood loss using flow cytometry, NanoString immune transcriptome profiling, and BioPlex cytokine secretome profiling. We observed that acute blood loss forces the differentiation of murine erythroid cells in both bone marrow and spleen and that there was an up-regulation of several immune response genes, in particular pathogen-associated molecular pattern sensing gene Clec5a in post-acute blood loss murine bone marrow erythroid cells. We believe that the up-regulation of the Clec5a gene in bone marrow erythroid cells could help bone marrow erythroid cells detect and eliminate pathogens with the help of reactive oxygen species and antimicrobial proteins calprotectin and cathelicidin, the genes of which (S100a8, S100a9, and Camp) dominate the expression in bone marrow erythroid cells of mice.
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