| Literature DB >> 26912466 |
Simon Stritt1, Paquita Nurden2, Ernest Turro3, Daniel Greene4, Sjoert B Jansen5, Sarah K Westbury6, Romina Petersen5, William J Astle7, Sandrine Marlin8, Tadbir K Bariana9, Myrto Kostadima5, Claire Lentaigne10, Stephanie Maiwald5, Sofia Papadia11, Anne M Kelly5, Jonathan C Stephens5, Christopher J Penkett11, Sofie Ashford11, Salih Tuna11, Steve Austin12, Tamam Bakchoul13, Peter Collins14, Rémi Favier15, Michele P Lambert16, Mary Mathias17, Carolyn M Millar10, Rutendo Mapeta11, David J Perry18, Sol Schulman19, Ilenia Simeoni11, Chantal Thys20, Keith Gomez21, Wendy N Erber22, Kathleen Stirrups11, Augusto Rendon23, John R Bradley24, Chris van Geet20, F Lucy Raymond25, Michael A Laffan10, Alan T Nurden2, Bernhard Nieswandt1, Sylvia Richardson26, Kathleen Freson20, Willem H Ouwehand27, Andrew D Mumford28.
Abstract
Macrothrombocytopenia (MTP) is a heterogeneous group of disorders characterized by enlarged and reduced numbers of circulating platelets, sometimes resulting in abnormal bleeding. In most MTP, this phenotype arises because of altered regulation of platelet formation from megakaryocytes (MKs). We report the identification of DIAPH1, which encodes the Rho-effector diaphanous-related formin 1 (DIAPH1), as a candidate gene for MTP using exome sequencing, ontological phenotyping, and similarity regression. We describe 2 unrelated pedigrees with MTP and sensorineural hearing loss that segregate with a DIAPH1 R1213* variant predicting partial truncation of the DIAPH1 diaphanous autoregulatory domain. The R1213* variant was linked to reduced proplatelet formation from cultured MKs, cell clustering, and abnormal cortical filamentous actin. Similarly, in platelets, there was increased filamentous actin and stable microtubules, indicating constitutive activation of DIAPH1. Overexpression of DIAPH1 R1213* in cells reproduced the cytoskeletal alterations found in platelets. Our description of a novel disorder of platelet formation and hearing loss extends the repertoire of DIAPH1-related disease and provides new insight into the autoregulation of DIAPH1 activity.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26912466 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2015-10-675629
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113