Erythroblastic islands – niches where red blood cells mature – have distinct compositions in mouse & human
In foetuses, white and red blood cells develop in the liver – the process of haematopoiesis – and at birth the bone marrow takes up the mantle. In both situations, red blood cells are nurtured to maturity in niches called erythroblastic islands where they lose their nuclei to maximise oxygen-carrying capacity (mature red cells and platelets are the only cells of the body without a nucleus). Here, mapping the gene activity of these islands in mouse and human foetal liver and bone marrow reveals a different make-up in each species - in mice, macrophages (large white cells of the immune system) play a key role, but not in humans which depend on the adhesion molecule ICAM4
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