Fisher J W, Nakashima J
Department of Pharmacology, Tulane University School of Medicine, New Orleans, Louisiana 70112.
Cancer. 1992 Aug 15;70(4 Suppl):928-39.
Hypoxia is the fundamental stimulus for erythropoietin (EP) production. It is clear that hypoxia increases erythropoietin messenger RNA in a renal cell, which leads to the production of increased amounts of erythropoietin in the kidney. Hypoxia also increases external messenger substances that amplify the effects of hypoxia and increases erythropoietin messenger RNA to further accelerate erythropoietin production. Some of these messenger substances are adenosine, eicosanoids, oxygen-derived metabolites, and beta-2 adrenergic agonists that are postulated to act through the activation of cell membrane receptors and are coupled to an increase in a G stimulatory protein which activates adenylate cyclase. This leads to increased production of cyclic adenosine monophosphate (AMP) for the production of key phosphoproteins that are involved in the biosynthesis/secretion of erythropoietin. This paper considers the physicochemical properties of human erythropoietin, pharmacologic agents that increase and decrease erythropoietin production/secretion, serum erythropoietin levels in normal human subjects and in patients with several types of anemia, and a model for the role of adenosine and other external messenger substances in erythropoietin biosynthesis/secretion.