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Fetal hemorrhage and platelet dysfunction in SLP-76–deficient mice
James L. Clements, … , Steven R. Lentz, Gary A. Koretzky
James L. Clements, … , Steven R. Lentz, Gary A. Koretzky
Published January 1, 1999
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 1999;103(1):19-25. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI5317.
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Article

Fetal hemorrhage and platelet dysfunction in SLP-76–deficient mice

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Abstract

The adapter protein SLP-76 is expressed in T lymphocytes and hematopoietic cells of the myeloid lineage, and is known to be a substrate of the protein tyrosine kinases that are activated after ligation of the T-cell antigen receptor. Transient overexpression of SLP-76 in a T-cell line potentiates transcriptional activation after T-cell receptor ligation, while loss of SLP-76 expression abrogates several T-cell receptor–dependent signaling pathways. Mutant mice that lack SLP-76 manifest a severe block at an early stage of thymocyte development, implicating SLP-76 in signaling events that promote thymocyte maturation. While it is clear that SLP-76 plays a key role in development and activation of T lymphocytes, relatively little is understood regarding its role in transducing signals initiated after receptor ligation in other hematopoietic cell types. In this report, we describe fetal hemorrhage and perinatal mortality in SLP-76–deficient mice. Although megakaryocyte and platelet development proceeds normally in the absence of SLP-76, collagen-induced platelet aggregation and granule release is markedly impaired. Furthermore, treatment of SLP-76–deficient platelets with collagen fails to elicit tyrosine phosphorylation of phospholipase C-γ2 (PLC-γ2), suggesting that SLP-76 functions upstream of PLC-γ2 activation. These data provide one potential mechanism for the fetal hemorrhage observed in SLP-76–deficient mice and reveal that SLP-76 expression is required for optimal receptor-mediated signal transduction in platelets as well as T lymphocytes.

Authors

James L. Clements, Jong Ran Lee, Barbara Gross, Baoli Yang, John D. Olson, Alexander Sandra, Stephen P. Watson, Steven R. Lentz, Gary A. Koretzky

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Figure 1

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SLP-76–deficient mice manifest diffuse, subcutaneous hemorrhage and edem...
SLP-76–deficient mice manifest diffuse, subcutaneous hemorrhage and edema. SLP-76+/– mice were mated and day of gestation was calculated based on the presence of a vaginal plug. At approximately day 14 (a and b) or day 18 (c–f) of gestation, the mother was sacrificed and fetuses were isolated. Genotypes were determined by PCR analysis using genomic DNA isolated from a small tissue sample as template. (a and b) Gross morphological appearance of littermate control (a) or SLP-76–/– (b) E14 fetuses. (c–f) Histological appearance of SLP-76+/– (c and e) and SLP-76–/– (d and f) fetal sections at day 18 of gestation. (c and d) Caudal view of embryos. Note close association of epithelium with underlying connective tissue (arrow) in the SLP-76+/– fetus and edema and subcutaneous bleeding in the SLP-76–/– fetus. B, bone; G, gut; K, kidney; L, liver. Bar represents 1000 μM. (e and f) High-power view of subcutaneous region. Note intact endothelium and intraluminal nucleated red blood cells (arrows) in SLP-76+/– embryo compared with attenuated endothelium, extravasated blood (arrow), and subcutaneous edema in the SLP-76–/– embryo. Bar represents 200 μM.

Copyright © 2025 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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