In this issue of Haematotogica, Rosato and colleagues from the laboratory of Dr. Roberta Russo, and other prominent collaborators, report their studies of a boy with anemia referred to them by clinical hematologists from Ancona, Italy, who noted that the child had moderate anemia but did not have appropriately elevated erythropoietin (EPO) expression.1 In fact, his EPO level was low, suggesting that it was the cause of his anemia. All the common causes of anemia were excluded. The presence of a similar phenotype in the father and his older sister suggested a genetic disorder with autosomal dominant inheritance. The delivery of o2 by red cells to all the other cells of the body is based on a beautiful homeostatic system in which hypoxia leads to increased EPO production, which binds to its receptor (EPOR) on erythroid progenitor cells and stimulates increased red blood cell formation, thereby ameliorating tissue hypoxia. The response to hypoxia is mediated by a short DNA sequence located downstream of the EPO gene that is known as the hypoxia response element, which contains a binding site for hypoxia-inducible factors (HIF).2 HIF are heterodimeric transcription factors that consist of an o2-regulated HIF-1α, HIF-2α or HIF-3α subunit and a constitutively expressed HIF-1|3 subunit.3 HIF-1 is expressed in virtually all nucleated cells, whereas HIF-2 and HIF-3 have limited tissue expression. In the presence of o2, HIF-α subunits are modified by a family of prolyl hydroxylase domain proteins (PHD1-3) and the hydroxylated proteins are bound by the von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) protein, which recruits a ubiquitin protein ligase, leading to the ubiquitination and proteasomal degradation of the HIF-a proteins. Under hypoxic conditions, the hydroxylation reaction is inhibited, and HIF-α subunits rapidly accumulate and regulate the expression of thousands of genes, including EPO, which mediate adaptive responses to hypoxia.
The key role of the HIF-PHD-VHL pathway in regulating erythropoiesis was underscored by the finding that familial erythrocytosis (i.e., abnormally increased red blood cell levels) is in some cases due to: a mutation in PHD2 that decreases hydroxylase activity; a mutation in VHL that decreases its binding to hydroxylated HIF; or a mutation in HIF-2α that protects it from hydroxylation (Table 1 lists all loci encoding HIF pathway components at which mutations have been identified; the references are available in the paper by Semenza3). However, the report by Rosato et at. provides the first example of the converse: that loss of HIF-2α expression results in anemia.1 The authors of this paper found in the propositus and his anemic family members a novel EPAS1 mutation, c.(61del), consisting of deletion of the 61st nucleotide of the coding sequence. This single nucleotide deletion alters the reading frame, resulting in the generation of a premature stop codon, such that the protein translated from the mutant mRNA would only contain the first 20 amino acids of HIF-2α. This severely truncated protein is likely degraded, resulting in a null allele and haploinsufficiency for HIF-2α, which leads to deficient EPO synthesis and anemia.
HIF-2, like HIF-1, has other systemic regulatory functions. EPAS1 gain-of-function mutations have diverse pathophysiologicaL consequences in addition to erythrocytosis, including pulmonary hypertension4 and thrombosis.5 Whether there is impairment of any other HIF-2-regulated systemic function associated with the EP>4S7c.(61del) genotype remains to be determined. One recent scientific advance may point to a potential therapy for affected individuals, which is the Food and Drug Administration's approval, just several months ago, of daprodustat, a selective inhibitor of the HIF prolyl hydroxylases, which increases HIF activity and thereby increases EPO production.6 The drug has been approved for the treatment of anemia in patients with dialysis-dependent chronic kidney disease, which leads to a progressive loss of EPO production. It is likely that daprodustat would boost HIF-2α levels in EP>4S7c.(61del) carriers, leading to increased EPO mRNA and protein expression. The close coupling of this drug approval and the report by Rosato et al. highlight the remarkably rapid progress that has been made since the discovery of HIF-1 three decades ago,2 with the development of the HIF stabilizer daprodustat for the treatment of anemia6 and the HIF-2α inhibitor belzutifan for the treatment of renal cell carcinoma.7 This is just the beginning.
Table 1.Identified causes of familial erythrocytosis.
Footnotes
- Received May 17, 2023
- Accepted May 29, 2023
Correspondence
Disclosures
No conflicts of interest to disclose.
Contributions
Both authors contributed equally.
References
- Rosato BE, Marra R, Del Giudice F. One gene, two opposite phenotypes: a case report of hereditary anemia due to a Loss-of-function variant in the EPAS1 gene. HaematoLogica. 2023; 108(10):2872-2876. https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2022.282457|PubMed|PubMed Central|Google Scholar
- Wang GL, Semenza GL. A nuclear factor induced by hypoxia via de novo protein synthesis binds to the human erythropoietin gene enhancer at a site required for transcriptional activation. Mol Cell Biol. 1992; 12(12):5447-5454. https://doi.org/10.1128/MCB.12.12.5447|PubMed|PubMed Central|Google Scholar
- Semenza GL. Regulation of erythropoiesis by the hypoxiainducible factor pathway: effects of genetic and pharmacological perturbations. Annu Rev Med. 2023; 74:307-319. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-med-042921-102602|PubMed|Google Scholar
- Gale DP, Harten SK, Reid CDL, Tuddenham EGD, Maxwell PH. Autosomal dominant erythrocytosis and pulmonary arterial hypertension associated with an activating HIF2cx mutation. Blood. 2008; 112(3):919-921. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2008-04-153718|PubMed|Google Scholar
- Gordeuk VR, Miasnikosa GY, Sergueeva Al. Thrombotic risk in congenital erythrocytosis due to up-regulated hypoxia sensing is not associated with elevated hematocrit. HaematoLogica. 2020; 105(3):e87-e90. https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2019.216267|PubMed|PubMed Central|Google Scholar
- Singh AK, Carroll K, Perkovic V. Daprodustat for the treatment of anemia in patients undergoing dialysis. N EnglJ Med. 2021; 385(25):2325-2335. https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa2113379|PubMed|Google Scholar
- Jonasch E, Donskov F, lliopoulos O. Belzutifan for renal cell carcinoma in von Hippel-Lindau disease. N Engl J Med. 2021; 385(22):2036-2046. https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa2103425|PubMed|PubMed Central|Google Scholar
Article Information

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.