Elevating fetal hemoglobin: recently discovered regulators and mechanisms.
Eugene KhandrosGerd A BlobelPublished in: Blood (2024)
It has been known for over half a century that throughout ontogeny, humans produce different forms of hemoglobin, a tetramer of α- and β-like hemoglobin chains. The switch from fetal to adult hemoglobin occurs around the time of birth when erythropoiesis shifts from the fetal liver to the bone marrow. Naturally, diseases caused by defective adult β-globin genes, such as sickle cell disease and β-thalassemia, manifest themselves as the production of fetal hemoglobin fades. Reversal of this developmental switch has been a major goal to treat these diseases and has been a driving force to understand its underlying molecular biology. Several review articles have illustrated the long and at times arduous paths that led to the discovery of the first transcriptional regulators involved in this process. Here, we survey recent developments spurred by the discovery of CRISPR tools that enabled for the first time high-throughput genetic screens for new molecules that impact the fetal-to-adult hemoglobin switch. Numerous opportunities for therapeutic intervention have thus come to light, offering hope for effective pharmacologic intervention for patients for whom gene therapy is out of reach.
Keyphrases
- high throughput
- sickle cell disease
- genome wide
- red blood cell
- bone marrow
- gene therapy
- randomized controlled trial
- end stage renal disease
- small molecule
- transcription factor
- newly diagnosed
- gene expression
- mesenchymal stem cells
- chronic kidney disease
- crispr cas
- peritoneal dialysis
- single cell
- prognostic factors
- pregnant women
- single molecule
- patient reported outcomes
- genome editing