Enhancer-gene rewiring in the pathogenesis of Quebec Platelet Disorder

Minggao Liang(University of Toronto), Asim Soomro(McMaster University), Subia Tasneem(McMaster University), Luis E. Abatti(University of Toronto), Azad Alizada(University of Toronto), Xuefei Yuan(University of Toronto), Liis Uusküla-Reimand(Hospital for Sick Children), Lina Antounians(University of Toronto), Sana Alvi(Hospital for Sick Children), Andrew D. Paterson(University of Toronto), Georges E. Rivard(Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Sainte-Justine), Ian C. Scott(University of Toronto), Jennifer A. Mitchell(University of Toronto), Catherine P.M. Hayward(Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Sainte-Justine), Michael D. Wilson(University of Toronto)
Blood
July 14, 2020
Cited by 26Open Access
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Abstract

Quebec platelet disorder (QPD) is an autosomal dominant bleeding disorder with a unique, platelet-dependent, gain-of-function defect in fibrinolysis, without systemic fibrinolysis. The hallmark feature of QPD is a >100-fold overexpression of PLAU, specifically in megakaryocytes. This overexpression leads to a >100-fold increase in platelet stores of urokinase plasminogen activator (PLAU/uPA); subsequent plasmin-mediated degradation of diverse α-granule proteins; and platelet-dependent, accelerated fibrinolysis. The causative mutation is a 78-kb tandem duplication of PLAU. How this duplication causes megakaryocyte-specific PLAU overexpression is unknown. To investigate the mechanism that causes QPD, we used epigenomic profiling, comparative genomics, and chromatin conformation capture approaches to study PLAU regulation in cultured megakaryocytes from participants with QPD and unaffected controls. QPD duplication led to ectopic interactions between PLAU and a conserved megakaryocyte enhancer found within the same topologically associating domain (TAD). Our results support a unique disease mechanism whereby the reorganization of sub-TAD genome architecture results in a dramatic, cell-type-specific blood disorder phenotype.


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