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How did the red blood cell in humans get to lose its nucleus (and other organelles)? Does the bone marrow just not put the nucleus in, or is it stripped out at some stage in the construction of the cell?

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Red blood cells are initially produced in the bone marrow with a nucleus. They then undergo a process known as enucleation in which their nucleus is removed. Enucleation occurs roughly when the cell has reached maturity. According to one research (Ji, et al., 2008), the way this occurs in mice is that a ring of actin filaments surrounds the cell, and then contracts. This cuts off a segment of the cell containing the nucleus, which is then swallowed by a macrophage. Enucleation in humans probably follows a very similar mechanism.

The absence of a nucleus is an adaptation of the red blood cell for its role. It allows the red blood cell to contain more haemoglobin (and, therefore, carry more oxygen molecules). It also allows the cell to have its distinctive bi-concave shape which aids diffusion - this shape would not be possible if the cell had a nucleus in the way. Because of the advantages it gives, it is easy to see why evolution would cause this to occur. However, since little is known about the genes the control enucleation, it is still not a fully understood process.

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Are there references for the second paragraph? – kmm Feb 14 '12 at 16:37
I can't find any references to journal articles, but the facts mentioned are often stated in text books or lecture notes. For example: faculty.ucc.edu/biology-atsma/misc/blood.htm – EdoDodo Feb 14 '12 at 17:32
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It's too bad they don't have citations. It would be nice to get away from just so stories and have a real evolutionary answer. – kmm Feb 15 '12 at 1:12
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I don't have access to the full text, but this article proposes resistance to oxidative stress as a reason for enucleation: Red blood cell extrudes nucleus and mitochondria against oxidative stress – nico May 8 at 12:15

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