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Physiological MplW514L expression in hematopoietic stem cell causes an essential thrombocythemia and progressive myelofibrosis
Shujing Zhang, Jingjing Liu, yuan li, Yi Wang, Lingling Wang, Miaomiao Xu, Yanxia Li, Ge Dong, Shanshan Wang, Yanmei Li, Zhigang Cai, Baobing Zhao
Shujing Zhang, Jingjing Liu, yuan li, Yi Wang, Lingling Wang, Miaomiao Xu, Yanxia Li, Ge Dong, Shanshan Wang, Yanmei Li, Zhigang Cai, Baobing Zhao
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Research In-Press Preview Hematology Oncology

Physiological MplW514L expression in hematopoietic stem cell causes an essential thrombocythemia and progressive myelofibrosis

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Abstract

Typ515 (W515) mutations in the protein MPL are one of key driver mutations promoting BCR/ABL-negative myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPNs), but their effects on hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) and MPN-related hematological abnormalities have not been studied in physiological contexts. Here, we established a MplW514L knock-in mouse model which largely mimics human MPLW515L mutation during hematopoiesis. The mutant mice developed an essential thrombocythemia (ET)-like MPN phenotypes, displaying excess megakaryopoiesis and thrombocytosis and progressive myelofibrosis. Mechanistically we observed that MplW514L-conditioned HSC compartment had a unique disease-initiating capacity however it did not exhibit a obvious advantage of competitive repopulation over wild-type control. Notably, single-cell analysis and flow cytometry profiles support that MplW514L expression led to a significant expansion of megakaryocyte-biased stem cell fate within the HSC pool. Finally, JAK2 inhibitor treatment phenotypically alleviated the ET signs but failed to eliminate the disease-initiating HSCs. These findings underscore the etiology of physiological expression of MPLW515L mutation in HSCs, and also provide a valuable in vivo model to evaluate potential therapeutic options for patients with MPLW515L-positive MPN.

Authors

Shujing Zhang, Jingjing Liu, yuan li, Yi Wang, Lingling Wang, Miaomiao Xu, Yanxia Li, Ge Dong, Shanshan Wang, Yanmei Li, Zhigang Cai, Baobing Zhao

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Usage data is cumulative from April 2026 through May 2026.

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ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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