Xenotropic and polytropic retrovirus receptor 1 regulates procoagulant platelet polyphosphate
Mailer, Reiner K; Allende, Mikel; Heestermans, Marco; Schweizer, Michaela; Deppermann, Carsten; Frye, Maike; Pula, Giordano; Odeberg, Jacob; Gelderblom, Mathias P; Rose-John, Stefan; Sickmann, Albert; Blankenberg, Stefan; Huber, Tobias B; Kubisch, Christian; Maas, Coen; Gambaryan, Stepan; Firsov, Dimitri; Stavrou, Evi X; Butler, Lynn; Renné, Thomas
(2021) Blood, volume 137, issue 10, pp. 1392 - 1405
(Article)
Abstract
Polyphosphate is a procoagulant inorganic polymer of linear-linked orthophosphate residues. Multiple investigations have established the importance of platelet polyphosphate in blood coagulation; however, the mechanistic details of polyphosphate homeostasis in mammalian species remain largely undefined. In this study, xenotropic and polytropic retrovirus receptor 1 (XPR1) regulated polyphosphate in platelets and
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was implicated in thrombosis in vivo. We used bioinformatic analyses of omics data to identify XPR1 as a major phosphate transporter in platelets. XPR1 messenger RNA and protein expression inversely correlated with intracellular polyphosphate content and release. Pharmacological interference with XPR1 activity increased polyphosphate stores, led to enhanced platelet-driven coagulation, and amplified thrombus formation under flow via the polyphosphate/factor XII pathway. Conditional gene deletion of Xpr1 in platelets resulted in polyphosphate accumulation, accelerated arterial thrombosis, and augmented activated platelet-driven pulmonary embolism without increasing bleeding in mice. These data identify platelet XPR1 as an integral regulator of platelet polyphosphate metabolism and reveal a fundamental role for phosphate homeostasis in thrombosis. Key Points: • Xenotropic and polytropic retrovirus receptor 1 (XPR1) is a major phosphate exporter in platelets. • Inhibiting XPR1 in platelets increases procoagulant polyphosphate levels and augments arterial and venous thrombosis in mice.
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Keywords: Hematology, Biochemistry, Cell Biology, Immunology, Journal Article
ISSN: 0006-4971
Publisher: Elsevier
Note: Funding Information: The authors thank Clément Naudin for critically reading the manuscript, and Anne Jämsä for valuable technical assistance. This work was supported by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) grants A11/SFB 877, B8/SFB 841, and P6/KFO306 (T.R.); and the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) (A.S.). Publisher Copyright: © 2021 American Society of Hematology
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