Two Different β3 Cysteine Substitutions Alter αIIbβ3 Maturation and Result in Glanzmann Thrombasthenia

2002 ◽  
Vol 88 (07) ◽  
pp. 104-110 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Milet-Marsal ◽  
C. Breillat ◽  
O. Peyruchaud ◽  
P. Nurden ◽  
R. Combrié ◽  
...  

SummaryWe report the defects responsible for Glanzmann thrombasthenia in two patients showing traces of abnormally migrating platelet β3 in immunoblotting. Using PCR-SSCP and direct sequencing, we identified a novel homozygous mutation in exon 10 of the β3 gene of patient 1 which gave a C457 to Y amino acid substitution. A C542 to R substitution in β3 of patient 2 was previously reported by us. These cysteines are present in EGF-domains 1 and 3 respectively of β3. We therefore constructed mutants carrying substitutions on cysteine residues in each of the first three EGF domains of β3, C457, C495 and C542 respectively. Transient expression of these mutants in COS-7 cells, including the C542 and C547 double mutant, proved that disulfide disruption directly affects cell surface expression of the integrin. We then showed by metabolic (35S) labeling and Endo-H glycosidase treatment that these substitutions strongly affected complex maturation within the cell.

Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 2181-2181
Author(s):  
Marloes R. Tijssen ◽  
Franca di Summa ◽  
Sonja Van den Oudenrijn ◽  
Carlijn Voermans ◽  
C.Ellen Van der Schoot ◽  
...  

Abstract Congenital amegakaryocytic thrombocytopenia (CAMT) is a rare disorder that presents with severe thrombocytopenia and absence of megakaryocytes in the bone marrow. The disease may develop into bone marrow aplasia. In vitro, CD34-positive hematopoietic progenitor cells from CAMT patients did not show any megakaryocyte formation in a Tpo-driven expansion culture. We and others found genetic defects in the gene encoding the Tpo receptor, c-mpl (Van den Oudenrijn et al., Br J Haematol.2002, 117: 390–398 and Ballmaier et al., Ann N Y Acad Sci.2003, 996: 17–25). In our patients, we found four mutations that predicted amino-acid substitutions, of which three in the extracellular domain; Arg102Pro, Pro136His and Arg257Cys, and one in the intracellular signaling domain (Pro635Leu), which may result in either defective Tpo-binding and/or signaling. To investigate this, we transfected full-length Mpl (wt and mutants) into the erythroleukemic cell line K562 and truncated Mpl (encompassing the extracellular domain; wt and mutants) into Baby Hamster Kidney (BHK) cells. In the K562 cells, the mRNA level (RQ-PCR) of the Pro136His mutant was severely decreased compared to the wt transfectant, while the mRNA level of the other mutants was comparable to that of wt. On Western blot, wt Mpl migrated as two, presumably differently glycosylated, bands of 75 kD and 72 kD. The mutants showed an altered migration pattern, which might result from differences in glycosylation. With the Pro635Leu mutant lower signals were obtained when equal amounts of total protein were loaded. Since the Mpl mRNA level was comparable to that of wt, this suggests a higher level of protein degradation. Upon transfection of the Arg102Pro and the Arg257Cys mutants in BHK cells, we observed that these mutants did not gain endo-H resistency, which suggests an aberrant processing of these mutant Mpls through the Golgi apparatus and retention in the ER. However, in cell fractionation experiments with surface-biotinylated K562 cells, biotinylated wt Mpl and mutant Mpl (except Pro136His) could be detected. Apparently, in K562 cells, the amino-acid substitutions do not impair membrane expression completely. To examine whether the mutant receptors were still able to signal after Tpo incubation, K562 cells were serum-starved and subsequently stimulated with 50 ng/ml rhTpo for 5 to 30 minutes. All mutants, including Pro136His, showed increased ERK phosphorylation after 5 minutes. To summarize, the Pro136His mutant is hardly expressed in the K562 expression model, presumably because of instability of the mRNA, but is still able to induce signaling. In contrast to the results obtained in the BHK model, the Arg102Pro and Arg257Cys mutants, showed cell-surface expression in the K562 cell line. The obtained cell-surface expression in the K562 model may have been significantly increased compared to the in vivo situation on hematopoietic stem cells, because of artificially induced efficient expression. Finally, with a super-physiological concentration of rhTpo, we obtained evidence that all Mpl mutants were able to signal upon Tpo binding. Whether impaired signaling by the Mpl mutants in the presence of physiological levels of Tpo may contribute to the development of CAMT, will be investigated.


2017 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thais Louvain de Souza ◽  
Regina C. de Souza Campos Fernandes ◽  
Juliana Azevedo da Silva ◽  
Vladimir Gomes Alves Júnior ◽  
Adelia Gomes Coelho ◽  
...  

2002 ◽  
Vol 88 (10) ◽  
pp. 655-662 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sandrine Milet-Marsal ◽  
Christelle Breillat ◽  
Olivier Peyruchaud ◽  
Paquita Nurden ◽  
Robert Combrié ◽  
...  

SummaryGlanzmann thrombasthenia is an inherited bleeding disorder arising from quantitative or qualitative defects of the αIIbβ3 integrin of platelets. Here, we report that PCR-SSCP analysis and DNA sequencing revealed a homozygous single base pair substitution in exon 12 of the αIIb gene leading to a Glu324 (E) to Lys (K) substitution in the αIIb subunit in a patient with Type I disease. As this mutation is found on at least 3 continents, the codon for Glu324 may be a mutational hotspot of the disease. To better understand this mutation, we analyzed the effect of substituting E324 with A324, L324, D324, Q324, N324, S324, as well as K324, looking at both αIIbβ3 maturation and cell surface expression in transiently transfected Cos-7 cells. The maturation state of the receptor clearly correlated with the level of cell membrane expression. Maturation efficiency was dependent on the electric charge as well as the size of the side chain of the amino acid present in what is a highly conserved N-terminal position in the third β-strand of blade 5 of the αIIbβ-propeller.


Blood ◽  
1993 ◽  
Vol 82 (6) ◽  
pp. 1913-1920 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Ugorski ◽  
DP Blackall ◽  
P Pahlsson ◽  
SH Shakin-Eshleman ◽  
J Moore ◽  
...  

Abstract Glycophorin A is a heavily glycosylated glycoprotein (1 N-linked and 15 O-linked oligosaccharides) and is highly expressed on the surface of human red blood cells. It is important in transfusion medicine because it carries several clinically relevant human blood group antigens. To study further the role of glycosylation in surface expression of this protein, four mutations were separately introduced into glycophorin A cDNA by site-directed mutagenesis. Each of these mutations blocks N- linked glycosylation at Asn26 of this glycoprotein by affecting the Asn- X-Ser/Thr acceptor sequence. Two of these mutations are identical to the amino acid polymorphisms found at position 28 in the Mi.I and Mi.II Miltenberger blood group antigens. The mutated recombinant glycoproteins were expressed in transfected wild-type and glycosylation- deficient Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells. When expressed in wild- type CHO cells and analyzed on Western blots, each of the four mutants had a faster electrophoretic mobility than wild-type glycophorin A, corresponding to a difference of approximately 4 Kd. This change is consistent with the absence of the N-linked oligosaccharide at Asn26. Each of the four mutants was highly expressed on the surface of CHO cells, confirming that, in the presence of normal O-linked glycosylation, the N-linked oligosaccharide is not necessary for cell surface expression of this glycoprotein. To examine the role of O- linked glycosylation in this process, the Mi.I mutant cDNA was transfected into the IdlD glycosylation-deficient CHO cell line. When the transfected IdlD cells were cultured in the presence of N- acetylgalactosamine alone, only intermediate levels of cell surface expression were seen for Mi.I mutant glycophorin A containing truncated O-linked oligosaccharides. In contrast, when cultured in the presence of galactose alone, or in the absence of both galactose and N- acetylgalactosamine, Mi.I mutant glycophorin A lacking both N-linked and O-linked oligosaccharides was not expressed at the cell surface. This extends previous results (Remaley et al, J Biol Chem 266:24176, 1991) showing that, in the absence of O-linked glycosylation, some types of N-linked glycosylation can support cell surface expression of glycophorin A. The glycophorin A mutants were also used for serologic testing with defined human antisera. These studies showed that the recombinant Mi.I and Mi.II glycoproteins appropriately bound anti-Vw and anti-Hut, respectively. They also demonstrated that these antibodies recognized the amino acid polymorphisms encoded by Mi.I and Mi.II rather than cryptic peptide antigens uncovered by the lack of N- linked glycosylation.


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