Nucleated Red Blood Cells Secrete Haptoglobin to Induce Immunosuppressive Function in Monocytes
Shusuke Takeuchi, Satoshi Fujiyama, Motomichi Nagafuji, Miyuki Mayumi, Makoto Saito, Mana Obata-Yasuoka, Hiromi Hamada, Yayoi Miyazono, Hidetoshi Takada

TL;DR
Nucleated red blood cells (NRBCs) secrete haptoglobin, which helps monocytes become immunosuppressive by activating a specific pathway.
Contribution
This study identifies haptoglobin as a novel soluble factor secreted by CD45− NRBCs that induces monocyte immunosuppression.
Findings
CD45− NRBCs secrete haptoglobin, which activates the CD163−HO-1 axis in monocytes.
Blocking CD163 or HO-1 reduced the immunosuppressive effect of NRBCs on monocytes.
NRBCs express the haptoglobin gene and increase haptoglobin levels in culture medium.
Abstract
Nucleated red blood cells (NRBCs) are precursors of red blood cells (RBCs), but also possess variety of immunomodulatory effects. However, among the three types of NRBCs, the immunological effects of human CD45− NRBCs remain largely unknown. We have previously shown that cord blood-derived CD45− NRBCs and adult peripheral blood-derived monocytes cocultured in a lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-stimulated indirect coculture system that avoided cell-to-cell contact, increase IL-10 and decrease TNF-α secretion, suggesting an immunosuppressive function of CD45− NRBCs via an unknown soluble factor. The peripheral blood of fetuses and neonates has abundant NRBCs and is physiologically polycythemic, which may lead to the peripheral accumulation of toxic plasma-free hemoglobin. Plasma-free hemoglobin binds to haptoglobin, forming a haptoglobin–hemoglobin complex, which is processed within monocytes via…
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Taxonomy
TopicsErythrocyte Function and Pathophysiology · Neonatal Health and Biochemistry · Hemoglobin structure and function
