Publication | Closed Access
Induction of Hemoglobin Accumulation in Human K562 Cells by Hemin Is Reversible
132
Citations
18
References
1981
Year
Blood CellTwenty Micromolar HeminRedox BiologyCellular PhysiologyEmbryologyHeme TraffickingHemoglobin InductionHemoglobin AccumulationLaboratory HematologyHematologyCell SignalingHealth SciencesCell DivisionHuman K562 CellsHeme HomeostasisCell BiologyDevelopmental BiologyHeme DegradationPhysiologyHemin IsMedicineK562 Cells
Twenty micromolar hemin causes no change in the rate of division of K562 cells but results in accumulation of 11 to 14 picograms of embryonic and fetal hemoglobins per cell. This effect is reversible, and hemoglobin induction in response to hemin, and loss of hemoglobin upon removal of hemin, can be cyclically repeated. The cells can be indefinitely subcultured in the presence of the inducer. Thus, the control of hemoglobin levels in K562 cells does not depend on irreversible differentiation.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1