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RhoA Is Essential for Maintaining Normal Megakaryocyte Ploidy and Platelet Generation

RhoA plays a multifaceted role in platelet biology. During platelet development, RhoA has been proposed to regulate endomitosis, proplatelet formation, and platelet release, in addition to having a role in platelet activation. These processes were previously studied using pharmacological inhibitors...

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Autores principales: Suzuki, Aae, Shin, Jae-Won, Wang, Yuhuan, Min, Sang H., Poncz, Morty, Choi, John K., Discher, Dennis E., Carpenter, Chris L., Lian, Lurong, Zhao, Liang, Wang, Yangfeng, Abrams, Charles S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3720647/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23935982
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0069315
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author Suzuki, Aae
Shin, Jae-Won
Wang, Yuhuan
Min, Sang H.
Poncz, Morty
Choi, John K.
Discher, Dennis E.
Carpenter, Chris L.
Lian, Lurong
Zhao, Liang
Wang, Yangfeng
Abrams, Charles S.
author_facet Suzuki, Aae
Shin, Jae-Won
Wang, Yuhuan
Min, Sang H.
Poncz, Morty
Choi, John K.
Discher, Dennis E.
Carpenter, Chris L.
Lian, Lurong
Zhao, Liang
Wang, Yangfeng
Abrams, Charles S.
author_sort Suzuki, Aae
collection PubMed
description RhoA plays a multifaceted role in platelet biology. During platelet development, RhoA has been proposed to regulate endomitosis, proplatelet formation, and platelet release, in addition to having a role in platelet activation. These processes were previously studied using pharmacological inhibitors in vitro, which have potential drawbacks, such as non-specific inhibition or incomplete disruption of the intended target proteins. Therefore, we developed a conditional knockout mouse model utilizing the CRE-LOX strategy to ablate RhoA, specifically in megakaryocytes and in platelets to determine its role in platelet development. We demonstrated that deleting RhoA in megakaryocytes in vivo resulted in significant macrothrombocytopenia. RhoA-null megakaryocytes were larger, had higher mean ploidy, and exhibited stiff membranes with micropipette aspiration. However, in contrast to the results observed in experiments relying upon pharmacologic inhibitors, we did not observe any defects in proplatelet formation in megakaryocytes lacking RhoA. Infused RhoA-null megakaryocytes rapidly released platelets, but platelet levels rapidly plummeted within several hours. Our evidence supports the hypothesis that changes in membrane rheology caused infused RhoA-null megakaryocytes to prematurely release aberrant platelets that were unstable. These platelets were cleared quickly from circulation, which led to the macrothrombocytopenia. These observations demonstrate that RhoA is critical for maintaining normal megakaryocyte development and the production of normal platelets.
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spelling pubmed-37206472013-08-09 RhoA Is Essential for Maintaining Normal Megakaryocyte Ploidy and Platelet Generation Suzuki, Aae Shin, Jae-Won Wang, Yuhuan Min, Sang H. Poncz, Morty Choi, John K. Discher, Dennis E. Carpenter, Chris L. Lian, Lurong Zhao, Liang Wang, Yangfeng Abrams, Charles S. PLoS One Research Article RhoA plays a multifaceted role in platelet biology. During platelet development, RhoA has been proposed to regulate endomitosis, proplatelet formation, and platelet release, in addition to having a role in platelet activation. These processes were previously studied using pharmacological inhibitors in vitro, which have potential drawbacks, such as non-specific inhibition or incomplete disruption of the intended target proteins. Therefore, we developed a conditional knockout mouse model utilizing the CRE-LOX strategy to ablate RhoA, specifically in megakaryocytes and in platelets to determine its role in platelet development. We demonstrated that deleting RhoA in megakaryocytes in vivo resulted in significant macrothrombocytopenia. RhoA-null megakaryocytes were larger, had higher mean ploidy, and exhibited stiff membranes with micropipette aspiration. However, in contrast to the results observed in experiments relying upon pharmacologic inhibitors, we did not observe any defects in proplatelet formation in megakaryocytes lacking RhoA. Infused RhoA-null megakaryocytes rapidly released platelets, but platelet levels rapidly plummeted within several hours. Our evidence supports the hypothesis that changes in membrane rheology caused infused RhoA-null megakaryocytes to prematurely release aberrant platelets that were unstable. These platelets were cleared quickly from circulation, which led to the macrothrombocytopenia. These observations demonstrate that RhoA is critical for maintaining normal megakaryocyte development and the production of normal platelets. Public Library of Science 2013-07-23 /pmc/articles/PMC3720647/ /pubmed/23935982 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0069315 Text en © 2013 Suzuki et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Suzuki, Aae
Shin, Jae-Won
Wang, Yuhuan
Min, Sang H.
Poncz, Morty
Choi, John K.
Discher, Dennis E.
Carpenter, Chris L.
Lian, Lurong
Zhao, Liang
Wang, Yangfeng
Abrams, Charles S.
RhoA Is Essential for Maintaining Normal Megakaryocyte Ploidy and Platelet Generation
title RhoA Is Essential for Maintaining Normal Megakaryocyte Ploidy and Platelet Generation
title_full RhoA Is Essential for Maintaining Normal Megakaryocyte Ploidy and Platelet Generation
title_fullStr RhoA Is Essential for Maintaining Normal Megakaryocyte Ploidy and Platelet Generation
title_full_unstemmed RhoA Is Essential for Maintaining Normal Megakaryocyte Ploidy and Platelet Generation
title_short RhoA Is Essential for Maintaining Normal Megakaryocyte Ploidy and Platelet Generation
title_sort rhoa is essential for maintaining normal megakaryocyte ploidy and platelet generation
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3720647/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23935982
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0069315
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