Gambari R
Boll Soc Ital Biol Sper. 1982 Nov 30;58(22):1439-45.
Human leukemia K-562(S) cells are a useful model system to study the relationship between cell proliferation and induced erythroid differentiation. In these studies K-562(S) cells were cultured in alpha -medium, 10% fetal calf serum and induced to express erythroid genes by 75 microM hemin, 1.2 mM butyric acid or 1.5 ng/ml actinomycin D. Cell number was determined using a ZF Coulter Counter and the increase in the proportion of hemoglobin-containing cells was detected by a specific colorimetric reaction with benzidine. The characterization of the synthesized hemoglobins was performed by cellulose-acetate gel electrophoresis of post-mitochondrial supernatants. By cloning K-562(S) cells in semi-solid medium (O,33% agar) containing 75 microM hemin a variant cell line, denominated K-562(S6), have been isolated which does not undergo terminal cell division but does express human globin genes and accumulates on the average 12 pg of Hb/cell. K-562(S6) cells accumulate, upon exposure to 75 microM hemin, mostly Hb Gower 1 (zeta 2 epsilon 2) and low amounts of Hb X (epsilon 2 gamma 2) and Hb Portland (zeta 2 gamma 2), being suitable for studies focused on the expression of embryonic globin genes and on the molecular mechanisms controlling the switching from embryonic-type to fetal-type hemoglobin accumulation, when in the human embryo zeta and epsilon globin genes become less active, being sharply increased accumulation of alpha and gamma globin chains.