Longitudinal study of 2 patients with cyclic thrombocytopenia, STAT3 and MPL mutations.

对 2 例患有周期性血小板减少症、STAT3 和 MPL 突变的患者进行纵向研究

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作者:Zhang Haiyu, Chien May, Hou Yu, Shomali William, Brar Rondeep S, Ho Chandler, Han Panpan, Xu Danfei, Zhang Bing M, Guo Xiangqian, Tolentino Lorna L, Wu Nancy C, Tsai Albert G, Jin Jing, Witteles Wesley H, Chen Zhenping, Abidi Parveen, Jangam Diwash, Krieger Madison S, Craig Morgan, Bussel James B, Gotlib Jason R, Zehnder James L
Cyclic thrombocytopenia (CTP) is a rare disease of periodic platelet count oscillations. The pathogenesis of CTP remains elusive. To study the underlying pathophysiology and genetic and cellular associations with CTP, we applied systems biology approaches to 2 patients with stable platelet cycling and reciprocal thrombopoietin (TPO) cycling at multiple time points through 2 cycles. Blood transcriptome analysis revealed cycling of platelet-specific genes, which are in parallel with and precede platelet count oscillation, indicating that cyclical platelet production leads platelet count cycling in both patients. Additionally, neutrophil and erythrocyte-specific genes also showed fluctuations correlating with platelet count changes, consistent with TPO effects on hematopoietic progenitors. Moreover, we found novel genetic associations with CTP. One patient had a novel germline heterozygous loss-of-function (LOF) thrombopoietin receptor (MPL) c.1210G>A mutation, and both had pathogenic somatic gain-of-function (GOF) variants in signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3). In addition, both patients had clonal T-cell populations that remained stable throughout platelet count cycles. These mutations and clonal T cells may potentially involve in the pathogenic baseline in these patients, rendering exaggerated persistent thrombopoiesis oscillations of their intrinsic rhythm upon homeostatic perturbations. This work provides new insights into the pathophysiology of CTP and possible therapies.

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