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Variable phenotypic penetrance of thrombosis in adult mice after tissue-selective and temporally controlled Thbd gene inactivation

Authors :
Thijs E. van Mens
Hai-Po H. Liang
Sreemanti Basu
Irene Hernandez
Mark Zogg
Jennifer May
Min Zhan
Qiuhui Yang
Jamie Foeckler
Shawn Kalloway
Rashmi Sood
Caren Sue Karlson
Hartmut Weiler
Source :
Blood Advances, Vol 1, Iss 15, Pp 1148-1158 (2017)
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2017.

Abstract

Abstract: Thrombomodulin (Thbd) exerts pleiotropic effects on blood coagulation, fibrinolysis, and complement system activity by facilitating the thrombin-mediated activation of protein C and thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor and may have additional thrombin- and protein C (pC)-independent functions. In mice, complete Thbd deficiency causes embryonic death due to defective placental development. In this study, we used tissue-selective and temporally controlled Thbd gene ablation to examine the function of Thbd in adult mice. Selective preservation of Thbd function in the extraembryonic ectoderm and primitive endoderm via the Meox2Cre-transgene enabled normal intrauterine development of Thbd-deficient (Thbd−/−) mice to term. Half of the Thbd−/− offspring expired perinatally due to thrombohemorrhagic lesions. Surviving Thbd−/− animals only rarely developed overt thrombotic lesions, exhibited low-grade compensated consumptive coagulopathy, and yet exhibited marked, sudden-onset mortality. A corresponding pathology was seen in mice in which the Thbd gene was ablated after reaching adulthood. Supplementation of activated PC by transgenic expression of a partially Thbd-independent murine pC zymogen prevented the pathologies of Thbd−/− mice. However, Thbd−/− females expressing the PC transgene exhibited pregnancy-induced morbidity and mortality with near-complete penetrance. These findings suggest that Thbd function in nonendothelial embryonic tissues of the placenta and yolk sac affects through as-yet-unknown mechanisms the penetrance and severity of thrombosis after birth and provide novel opportunities to study the role of the natural Thbd-pC pathway in adult mice and during pregnancy.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
24739529
Volume :
1
Issue :
15
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Blood Advances
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.8dc20687e39c4725a7cbdda6d7bf23da
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1182/bloodadvances.2017005058