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Increased expression of urokinase plasminogen...
Journal article

Increased expression of urokinase plasminogen activator in Quebec platelet disorder is linked to megakaryocyte differentiation

Abstract

Quebec platelet disorder (QPD) is an inherited bleeding disorder associated with increased urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA) in platelets but not in plasma, intraplatelet plasmin generation, and alpha-granule protein degradation. These abnormalities led us to investigate uPA expression by QPD CD34(+) progenitors, cultured megakaryocytes, and platelets, and whether uPA was stored in QPD alpha-granules. Although QPD CD34(+) progenitors expressed normal amounts of uPA, their differentiation into megakaryocytes abnormally increased expression of the uPA gene but not the flanking genes for vinculin or calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase IIgamma on chromosome 10. The increased uPA production by cultured QPD megakaryocytes mirrored their production of alpha-granule proteins, which was normal. uPA was localized to QPD alpha-granules and it showed extensive colocalization with alpha-granule proteins in both cultured QPD megakaryocytes and platelets, and with plasminogen in QPD platelets. In QPD megakaryocytes, cultured without or with plasma as a source of plasminogen, alpha-granule proteins were stored undegraded and this was associated with much less uPA-plasminogen colocalization than in QPD platelets. Our studies indicate that the overexpression of uPA in QPD emerges with megakaryocyte differentiation, without altering the expression of flanking genes, and that uPA is costored with alpha-granule proteins prior to their proteolysis in QPD.

Authors

Veljkovic DK; Rivard GE; Diamandis M; Blavignac J; Cramer-Bordé EM; Hayward CPM

Journal

Blood, Vol. 113, No. 7, pp. 1535–1542

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Publication Date

February 12, 2009

DOI

10.1182/blood-2008-08-172338

ISSN

0006-4971

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