Hemoglobin switching's surprise: the versatile transcription factor BCL11A is a master repressor of fetal hemoglobin

DE Bauer, SH Orkin - Current opinion in genetics & development, 2015 - Elsevier
DE Bauer, SH Orkin
Current opinion in genetics & development, 2015Elsevier
The major disorders of β-globin, sickle cell disease and β-thalassemia, may be ameliorated
by expression of the fetal gene paralog γ-globin. Uncertainty regarding the mechanisms
repressing fetal hemoglobin in the adult stage has served as a puzzle of developmental
gene regulation as well as a barrier to rational therapeutic design. Recent genome-wide
association studies implicated the zinc-finger transcriptional repressor BCL11A in fetal
hemoglobin regulation. Extensive genetic analyses have validated BCL11A as a potent …
The major disorders of β-globin, sickle cell disease and β-thalassemia, may be ameliorated by expression of the fetal gene paralog γ-globin. Uncertainty regarding the mechanisms repressing fetal hemoglobin in the adult stage has served as a puzzle of developmental gene regulation as well as a barrier to rational therapeutic design. Recent genome-wide association studies implicated the zinc-finger transcriptional repressor BCL11A in fetal hemoglobin regulation. Extensive genetic analyses have validated BCL11A as a potent repressor of fetal hemoglobin level. Studies of BCL11A exemplify how contextual gene regulation may often be the substrate for trait-associated common genetic variation. These discoveries have suggested novel rational approaches for the β-hemoglobin disorders including therapeutic genome editing.
Elsevier