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LMAN1 serves as a cargo receptor for thrombopoietin
Lesley A. Everett, … , Beth McGee, Rami Khoriaty
Lesley A. Everett, … , Beth McGee, Rami Khoriaty
Published November 5, 2024
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2024;9(24):e175704. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.175704.
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Research Article Hematology

LMAN1 serves as a cargo receptor for thrombopoietin

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Abstract

Thrombopoietin (TPO) is a plasma glycoprotein that binds its receptor on megakaryocytes (MKs) and MK progenitors, resulting in enhanced platelet production. The mechanism by which TPO is secreted from hepatocytes remains poorly understood. Lectin mannose-binding 1 (LMAN1) and multiple coagulation factor deficiency 2 (MCFD2) form a complex at the endoplasmic reticulum membrane, recruiting cargo proteins into COPII vesicles for secretion. In this study, we showed that LMAN1-deficient mice (with complete germline LMAN1 deficiency) exhibited mild thrombocytopenia, whereas the platelet count was entirely normal in mice with approximately 7% Lman1 expression. Surprisingly, mice deleted for Mcfd2 did not exhibit thrombocytopenia. Analysis of peripheral blood from LMAN1-deficient mice demonstrated normal platelet size and normal morphology of dense and alpha granules. LMAN1-deficient mice exhibited a trend toward reduced MK and MK progenitors in the bone marrow. We next showed that hepatocyte-specific but not hematopoietic Lman1 deletion results in thrombocytopenia, with plasma TPO level reduced in LMAN1-deficient mice, despite normal Tpo mRNA levels in LMAN1-deficient livers. TPO and LMAN1 interacted by coimmunoprecipitation in a heterologous cell line, and TPO accumulated intracellularly in LMAN1-deleted cells. Together, these studies verified the hepatocyte as the cell of origin for TPO production in vivo and were consistent with LMAN1 as the endoplasmic reticulum cargo receptor that mediates the efficient secretion of TPO. To our knowledge, TPO is the first example of an LMAN1-dependent cargo that is independent of MCFD2.

Authors

Lesley A. Everett, Zesen Lin, Ann Friedman, Vi T. Tang, Greggory Myers, Ginette Balbin-Cuesta, Richard King, Guojing Zhu, Beth McGee, Rami Khoriaty

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Figure 4

Deletion of Lman1 in hepatocytes, but not hematopoietic cells, results in thrombocytopenia.

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Deletion of Lman1 in hepatocytes, but not hematopoietic cells, results i...
(A) Lman1 was deleted in hematopoietic cells using the Tie2-Cre transgene and in hepatocytes using the Alb-Cre transgene. (B) Mice with hematopoietic Lman1 deletion exhibit normal platelet counts, comparable to those of WT littermate controls. Hepatocyte-specific Lman1 deletion (using the Alb-Cre transgene) result in thrombocytopenia, with platelet counts indistinguishable from those seen in mice with germline Lman1 deletion. Data were analyzed using 1-way ANOVA, with correction for multiple-comparison testing.

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