The metabolic basis of inherited neutropenias

Author:

Oyarbide Usua12ORCID,Crane Genevieve M.3,Corey Seth J.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cancer Biology Cleveland Clinic Cleveland Ohio USA

2. Department of Pediatrics Cleveland Clinic Cleveland Ohio USA

3. Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine Cleveland Clinic Cleveland Ohio USA

Abstract

SummaryNeutrophils are the shortest‐lived blood cells, which requires a prodigious degree of proliferation and differentiation to sustain physiologically sufficient numbers and be poised to respond quickly to infectious emergencies. More than 107 neutrophils are produced every minute in an adult bone marrow—a process that is tightly regulated by a small group of cytokines and chemical mediators and dependent on nutrients and energy. Like granulocyte colony‐stimulating factor, the primary growth factor for granulopoiesis, they stimulate signalling pathways, some affecting metabolism. Nutrient or energy deficiency stresses the survival, proliferation, and differentiation of neutrophils and their precursors. Thus, it is not surprising that monogenic disorders related to metabolism exist that result in neutropenia. Among these are pathogenic mutations in HAX1, G6PC3, SLC37A4, TAFAZZIN, SBDS, EFL1 and the mitochondrial disorders. These mutations perturb carbohydrate, lipid and/or protein metabolism. We hypothesize that metabolic disturbances may drive the pathogenesis of a subset of inherited neutropenias just as defects in DNA damage response do in Fanconi anaemia, telomere maintenance in dyskeratosis congenita and ribosome formation in Diamond–Blackfan anaemia. Greater understanding of metabolic pathways in granulopoiesis will identify points of vulnerability in production and may point to new strategies for the treatment of neutropenias.

Funder

Congressionally Directed Medical Research Programs

Hyundai Hope On Wheels

Lisa Dean Moseley Foundation

National Cancer Institute

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Hematology

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