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Publication : Genetic deletion of JAM-C reveals a role in myeloid progenitor generation.

First Author  Praetor A Year  2009
Journal  Blood Volume  113
Issue  9 Pages  1919-28
PubMed ID  19109565 Mgi Jnum  J:145994
Mgi Id  MGI:3836491 Doi  10.1182/blood-2008-06-159574
Citation  Praetor A, et al. (2009) Genetic deletion of JAM-C reveals a role in myeloid progenitor generation. Blood 113(9):1919-28
abstractText  Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) have the capacity to self-renew and continuously differentiate into all blood cell lineages throughout life. At each branching point during differentiation, interactions with the environment are key in the generation of daughter cells with distinct fates. Here, we examined the role of the cell adhesion molecule JAM-C, a protein known to mediate cellular polarity during spermatogenesis, in hematopoiesis. We show that murine JAM-C is highly expressed on HSCs in the bone marrow (BM). Expression correlates with self-renewal, the highest being on long-term repopulating HSCs, and decreases with differentiation, which is maintained longest among myeloid committed progenitors. Inclusion of JAM-C as a sole marker on lineage-negative BM cells yields HSC enrichments and long-term multilineage reconstitution when transferred to lethally irradiated mice. Analysis of Jam-C-deficient mice showed that two-thirds die within 48 hours after birth. In the surviving animals, loss of Jam-C leads to an increase in myeloid progenitors and granulocytes in the BM. Stem cells and myeloid cells from fetal liver are normal in number and homing to the BM. These results provide evidence that JAM-C defines HSCs in the BM and that JAM-C plays a role in controlling myeloid progenitor generation in the BM.
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