On page 4933 in the 5 May 2011 issue, an edit was made in copyediting that changed the meaning of a sentence. In “Discussion” in the third sentence of the first paragraph under the heading, “EryP progenitors, hypoxia, and the Warburg effect,” the text reads, “It is intriguing that the transcriptome of EryP progenitors revealed a signature generally associated with cancer and other rapidly proliferating cells, which catabolize glucose aerobically and produce high levels of lactate in the cytosol, rather than using the more energy-efficient mitochondrial pathway known as the ‘Warburg effect.’23,24” The sentence should have read, “It is intriguing that the transcriptome of EryP progenitors revealed a signature generally associated with cancer and other rapidly proliferating cells, which catabolize glucose aerobically and produce high levels of lactate in the cytosol (the “Warburg effect”23,24), rather than using the more energy-efficient mitochondrial pathway.”

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