Current Issues in Molecular Biology (Nov 2024)

Transmembrane-4 L-Six Family Member-1 Is Essential for Embryonic Blood Vessel Development

  • Chi-Iou Lin,
  • Anne Merley,
  • Hiromi Wada,
  • Jianwei Zheng,
  • Shou-Ching S. Jaminet

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cimb46110781
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 46, no. 11
pp. 13105 – 13118

Abstract

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Transmembrane-4 L-six family member-1 (TM4SF1) is a small cell surface glycoprotein that is highly and selectively expressed on endothelial cell and mesenchymal stem cell surfaces. TM4SF1 regulates cellular functions by forming protein complexes called TMED (TM4SF1-enriched microdomains) that either recruit growth-factor activated proteins and internalize them via microtubules to distribute the recruited molecules intracellularly or support the formation of nanopodia for intercellular interactions extracellularly. Through a genetically manipulated mouse model for global Tm4sf1 gene knockout, we demonstrate here that TM4SF1 is essential for blood vessel development. Tm4sf1-null embryos fail to develop blood vessels and experience lethality at E9.5. Tm4SF1-heterozygous embryos are smaller in body size during early embryonic development, and almost half die in utero due to intracranial hemorrhage in the intraventricular and subarachnoid space, which becomes apparent by E17.5. Surviving Tm4SF1-heterozygotes do not display overt phenotypic differences relative to wild type littermates postnatally. Together, these studies demonstrate that TM4SF1, through its molecular facilitator and nanopodia formation roles in TMED, intimately regulates blood vessel formation during embryonic development.

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