[HTML][HTML] Megakaryocytes compensate for Kit insufficiency in murine arthritis

P Cunin, LR Penke, JN Thon… - The Journal of …, 2017 - Am Soc Clin Investig
P Cunin, LR Penke, JN Thon, PA Monach, T Jones, MH Chang, MM Chen, I Melki, S Lacroix
The Journal of clinical investigation, 2017Am Soc Clin Investig
The growth factor receptor Kit is involved in hematopoietic and nonhematopoietic
development. Mice bearing Kit defects lack mast cells; however, strains bearing different Kit
alleles exhibit diverse phenotypes. Herein, we investigated factors underlying differential
sensitivity to IgG-mediated arthritis in 2 mast cell–deficient murine lines: KitWsh/Wsh, which
develops robust arthritis, and KitW/Wv, which does not. Reciprocal bone marrow
transplantation between KitW/Wv and KitWsh/Wsh mice revealed that arthritis resistance …
The growth factor receptor Kit is involved in hematopoietic and nonhematopoietic development. Mice bearing Kit defects lack mast cells; however, strains bearing different Kit alleles exhibit diverse phenotypes. Herein, we investigated factors underlying differential sensitivity to IgG-mediated arthritis in 2 mast cell–deficient murine lines: KitWsh/Wsh, which develops robust arthritis, and KitW/Wv, which does not. Reciprocal bone marrow transplantation between KitW/Wv and KitWsh/Wsh mice revealed that arthritis resistance reflects a hematopoietic defect in addition to mast cell deficiency. In KitW/Wv mice, restoration of susceptibility to IgG-mediated arthritis was neutrophil independent but required IL-1 and the platelet/megakaryocyte markers NF-E2 and glycoprotein VI. In KitW/Wv mice, platelets were present in numbers similar to those in WT animals and functionally intact, and transfer of WT platelets did not restore arthritis susceptibility. These data implicated a platelet-independent role for the megakaryocyte, a Kit-dependent lineage that is selectively deficient in KitW/Wv mice. Megakaryocytes secreted IL-1 directly and as a component of circulating microparticles, which activated synovial fibroblasts in an IL-1–dependent manner. Transfer of WT but not IL-1–deficient megakaryocytes restored arthritis susceptibility to KitW/Wv mice. These findings identify functional redundancy among Kit-dependent hematopoietic lineages and establish an unanticipated capacity of megakaryocytes to mediate IL-1–driven systemic inflammatory disease.
The Journal of Clinical Investigation