Publications by authors named "T V Andrienko"

Article Synopsis
  • β-thalassemia is a common genetic disorder that causes severe anemia due to issues with red blood cell production, but treatment options are limited.
  • This study creates human cellular models of β-thalassemia through gene editing, closely mimicking patient erythroid cells and allowing for effective analysis of the disease.
  • An innovative fluorometric-based assay was developed to assess disease severity, revealing numerous altered biological pathways and potential new therapeutic targets for drug development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Developing robust methodology for the sustainable production of red blood cells is essential for providing an alternative source of clinical-quality blood, particularly for individuals with rare blood group phenotypes. Immortalized erythroid progenitor cell lines are the most promising emergent technology for achieving this goal. We previously created the erythroid cell line BEL-A from bone marrow CD34 cells that had improved differentiation and enucleation potential compared to other lines reported.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We previously demonstrated that hexokinase II (HK2) dissociation from mitochondria during cardiac ischemia correlates with cytochrome c (cyt-c) loss, oxidative stress and subsequent reperfusion injury. However, whether HK2 release is the primary signal mediating this ischemia-induced mitochondrial dysfunction was not established. To investigate this, we studied the effects of dissociating HK2 from isolated heart mitochondria.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Pluripotent stem cells are attractive progenitor cells for the generation of erythroid cells in vitro as have expansive proliferative potential. However, although embryonic (ESC) and induced pluripotent (iPSC) stem cells can be induced to undergo erythroid differentiation, the majority of cells fail to enucleate and the molecular basis of this defect is unknown. One protein that has been associated with the initial phase of erythroid cell enucleation is the intermediate filament vimentin, with loss of vimentin potentially required for the process to proceed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Development of in vitro culture systems for the generation of red blood cells is a goal of scientists globally with the aim of producing clinical grade products for transfusion. Although mature reticulocytes can be efficiently generated by such systems, the numbers produced fall short of that required for therapeutics, due to limited proliferative capacity of the erythroblasts. To overcome this hurdle, approaches are required to increase the expansion potential of such culture systems.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF