We have studied the effect of transforming growth factor beta (TGFbeta) on erythropoiesis in cultures from adult peripheral blood, using flow cytometric enumeration of fetal hemoglobin (HbF)-containing cells. TGFbeta caused a dramatic increase in the proportions of cells that accumulated HbF together with adult hemoglobin (HbA) (F+A+ cells). This highly significant (P <.0001) increase in F+ cell proportion was achieved by TGFbeta treatment during the first 4 days of culture and was sustained during further culture expansion in the absence of TGFbeta. The increase in F+ cell proportions did not depend on the cytokine combination (EPO+SCF+IL3, EPO+SCF, EPO+IL3, SCF+IL3) used during the phase of TGFbeta treatment. Increased F+ cell proportions were paralleled by an increased molecular ratio of HbF/ HbF+ HbA, measured by cation exchange high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). In addition to the effect on F+ cell proportions, TGFbeta caused a dramatic increase in overall cell division potential. By the time cultures reached terminal growth arrest (12-14 days in controls and 18-26 days after TGFbeta), the overall numbers of F+ cells produced per initially seeded clonogenic cell was approximately 10 times higher in the TGFbeta-treated cultures than in the controls. We propose to investigate whether the TGFbeta-induced increase in relative and absolute numbers of nucleated F+ cells, as demonstrated in vitro, can be translated into increased F+ erythrocytes in vivo, allowing therapeutic application for some beta-hemoglobinopathies. (Blood. 2000;95:2967-2974)

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