Background: At the end of maturation, megakaryocytes (MKs) form long cytoplasmic extensions called proplatelets (PPT). Enormous changes in cytoskeletal structures cause PPT to extend further, to re-localize organelles such as mitochondria and to fragment, leading to platelet release. Two non-muscle myosin IIs (NMIIs) are expressed in MKs; however, only NMII-A (MYH9), but not NMII-B (MYH10), is expressed in mature MKs and is implicated in PPT formation.
Objectives: To provide in vivo evidence on the specific role of NMII-A and IIB in MK PPT formation.
Methods: We studied two transgenic mouse models in which non-muscle myosin heavy chain (NMHC) II-A was genetically replaced either by II-B or by a chimeric NMHCII that combined the head domain of II-A with the rod and tail domains of II-B.
Results and conclusions: This work demonstrates that the kinetic properties of NM-IIA, depending on the N-terminal domain, render NMII-A the better NMII candidate to control PPT formation. Furthermore, the carboxyl-terminal domain determines myosin II localization in the constriction region of PPT and is responsible for the specific role of NMII in platelet release.
Keywords: Non-muscle myosin type IIA; Non-muscle myosin type IIB; megakaryocyte; platelet; stem cell.
© 2015 International Society on Thrombosis and Haemostasis.