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Developmental differences of in vitro cultured murine bone marrow- and fetal liver-derived megakaryocytes

Authors :
Ivana Bertović
Ana Bura
Antonija Jurak Begonja
Source :
Platelets, Vol 33, Iss 6, Pp 887-899 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Taylor & Francis Group, 2022.

Abstract

Multiple lines of evidence support differences in the megakaryopoiesis during development. Murine in vitro models to study megakaryopoiesis employ cultured megakaryocytes MKs derived from adult bone marrow (BM) or fetal livers (FL) of mouse embryos. Mouse models allow to study the molecular basis for cellular changes utilizing conditional or knock-out models and permit further in vitro genetic or pharmacological manipulations. Despite being extensively used, MKs cultured from these two sources have not been systematically compared. In the present study, we compared BM- and FL-derived MKs, assessing their size, proplatelet production capacity, expression of common MK markers (αIIb, β3, GPIb α, β) and cytoskeletal proteins (filamin A, β1-tubulin, actin), the subcellular appearance of α-granules (VWF), membranes (GPIbβ) and cytoskeleton (F-actin) throughout in vitro development. We demonstrate that FL MKs although smaller in size, spontaneously produce more proplatelets than BM MKs and at earlier stages express more β1-tubulin. In addition, early FL MKs show increased internal GPIbβ staining and present higher GPIbβ (early and late) and VWF (late stages) total fluorescence intensity (TFI)/cell size than BM MKs. BM MKs have up-regulated TPO signaling corresponding to their bigger size and ploidy, without changes in c-Mpl. Expressing endogenous β1-tubulin or the presence of heparin improves BM MKs ability to produce proplatelets. These data suggest that FL MKs undergo cytoplasmic maturation earlier than BM MKs and that this, in addition to higher β1-tubulin levels and GPIb, supported with an extensive F-actin network, could contribute to more efficient proplatelet formation in vitro.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09537104 and 13691635
Volume :
33
Issue :
6
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Platelets
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.f5338c277a6c4f619e70e9ecaffe8c42
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/09537104.2021.2007869