Tetraspanin Tspan9 regulates platelet collagen receptor GPVI lateral diffusion and activation.
Elizabeth J HainingAlexandra L MatthewsPeter J NoyHanna M RomanskaHelen J HarrisJeremy PikeMartina MorowskiRebecca L GavinJing YangPierre-Emmanuel MilhietFedor BerditchevskiBernhard NieswandtNatalie S PoulterStephen P WatsonMichael G TomlinsonPublished in: Platelets (2016)
The tetraspanins are a superfamily of four-transmembrane proteins, which regulate the trafficking, lateral diffusion and clustering of the transmembrane proteins with which they interact. We have previously shown that tetraspanin Tspan9 is expressed on platelets. Here we have characterised gene-trap mice lacking Tspan9. The mice were viable with normal platelet numbers and size. Tspan9-deficient platelets were specifically defective in aggregation and secretion induced by the platelet collagen receptor GPVI, despite normal surface GPVI expression levels. A GPVI activation defect was suggested by partially impaired GPVI-induced protein tyrosine phosphorylation. In mechanistic experiments, Tspan9 and GPVI co-immunoprecipitated and co-localised, but super-resolution imaging revealed no defects in collagen-induced GPVI clustering on Tspan9-deficient platelets. However, single particle tracking using total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy showed that GPVI lateral diffusion was reduced by approximately 50% in the absence of Tspan9. Therefore, Tspan9 plays a fine-tuning role in platelet activation by regulating GPVI membrane dynamics.
Keyphrases
- single cell
- high resolution
- minimally invasive
- high glucose
- binding protein
- diabetic rats
- poor prognosis
- rna seq
- adipose tissue
- high throughput
- metabolic syndrome
- mass spectrometry
- high fat diet induced
- oxidative stress
- genome wide
- drug induced
- transcription factor
- endothelial cells
- wild type
- skeletal muscle
- copy number
- protein kinase
- stress induced
- genome wide identification
- quantum dots
- soft tissue