Role of the clathrin adaptor PICALM in normal hematopoiesis and polycythemia vera pathophysiology Journal Article


Authors: Ishikawa, Y.; Maeda, M.; Pasham, M.; Aguet, F.; Tacheva-Grigorova, S. K.; Masuda, T.; Yi, H.; Lee, S. U.; Xu, J.; Teruya-Feldstein, J.; Ericsson, M.; Mullally, A.; Heuser, J.; Kirchhausen, T.; Maeda, T.
Article Title: Role of the clathrin adaptor PICALM in normal hematopoiesis and polycythemia vera pathophysiology
Abstract: Clathrin-dependent endocytosis is an essential cellular process shared by all cell types. Despite this, precisely how endocytosis is regulated in a cell-type-specific manner and how this key pathway functions physiologically or pathophysiologically remain largely unknown. PICALM, which encodes the clathrin adaptor protein PICALM, was originally identified as a component of the CALM/AF10 leukemia oncogene. Here we show, by employing a series of conditional Picalm knockout mice, that PICALM critically regulates transferrin uptake in erythroid cells by functioning as a cell-type-specific regulator of transferrin receptor endocytosis. While transferrin receptor is essential for the development of all hematopoietic lineages, Picalm was dispensable for myeloid and B-lymphoid development. Furthermore, global Picalm inactivation in adult mice did not cause gross defects in mouse fitness, except for anemia and a coat color change. Freeze-etch electron microscopy of primary erythroblasts and live-cell imaging of murine embryonic fibroblasts revealed that Picalm function is required for efficient clathrin coat maturation. We showed that the PICALM PIP<inf>2</inf> binding domain is necessary for transferrin receptor endocytosis in erythroblasts and absolutely essential for erythroid development from mouse hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells in an erythroid culture system. We further showed that Picalm deletion entirely abrogated the disease phenotype in a Jak2V617F knock-in murine model of polycythemia vera. Our findings provide new insights into the regulation of cell-type-specific transferrin receptor endocytosis in vivo. They also suggest a new strategy to block cellular uptake of transferrin-bound iron, with therapeutic potential for disorders characterized by inappropriate red blood cell production, such as polycythemia vera. © 2015 Ferrata Storti Foundation.
Keywords: controlled study; unclassified drug; gene mutation; human cell; nonhuman; pathophysiology; quantitative assay; animal cell; mouse; phenotype; electron microscopy; cell function; anemia; cell maturation; erythroblast; erythropoiesis; animal experiment; hematopoiesis; gene inactivation; bone marrow cell; leukocyte count; hermes antigen; endocytosis; polycythemia vera; pre b lymphocyte; clathrin; transferrin receptor; lymphocyte antigen; cd71 antigen; human; article; clathrin assembly protein; phosphatidylinositol binding clathrin assembly protein; ter119
Journal Title: Haematologica
Volume: 100
Issue: 4
ISSN: 0390-6078
Publisher: Ferrata Storti Foundation  
Date Published: 2015-04-01
Start Page: 439
End Page: 451
Language: English
DOI: 10.3324/haematol.2014.119537
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC4380716
PUBMED: 25552701
DOI/URL:
Notes: Export Date: 4 May 2015 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Julie T Feldstein
    298 Feldstein