Congenital amegakaryocytic thrombocytopenia (CAMT) is a rare disorder of undefined aetiology. The disease presents with severe thrombocytopenia and absence of megakaryocytes in the bone marrow. Furthermore, CAMT patients may develop bone marrow aplasia. To obtain more insight into the mechanism underlying CAMT, five children were analysed. All patients had increased plasma thrombopoietin (Tpo) levels, indicating a platelet production defect. Bone marrow‐derived CD34+ stem cells from three patients were cultured in an in vitro liquid culture system to study megakaryocytopoiesis. CD34+ cells from two of the three patients failed to differentiate into megakaryocytes. The lack of megakaryocyte formation could imply that a defect in the c‐mpl gene, encoding the Tpo receptor, exists. Sequencing of c‐mpl revealed mutations in four of five patients. Three patients had point mutations and/or a deletion in the coding regions of c‐mpl. All point mutations led to an amino acid substitution or to a premature stop codon. In one patient, a homozygous mutation in the last base of intron 10 was found that resulted in loss of a splice site. This study showed that mutations in c‐mpl could be the cause of thrombocytopenia in CAMT in the majority of patients. Furthermore, Tpo has been shown to have an anti‐apoptotic effect on stem cells. Therefore, mutations in c‐mpl might not only affect megakaryocyte formation but may also impair stem cell survival, which could explain the occurrence of bone marrow failure as final outcome in patients with CAMT.
Phage display is a widely used technology for the isolation of peptides and proteins with specific binding properties from large libraries of these molecules. A drawback of the common phagemid/helper phage systems is the high infective background of phages that do not display the protein of interest, but are propagated due to non-specific binding to selection targets. This and the enhanced growth rates of bacteria harboring aberrant phagemids not expressing recombinant proteins leads to a serious decrease in selection efficiency. Here we describe a VCSM13-derived helper phage that circumvents this problem, because it lacks the genetic information for the infectivity domains of phage coat protein pIII. Rescue of a library with this novel CT helper phage yields phages that are only infectious when they contain a phagemid-encoded pIII-fusion protein, since phages without a displayed protein carry truncated pIII only and are lost upon re-infection. Importantly, the CT helper phage can be produced in quantities similar to the VCSM13 helper phage. The superiority of CT over VCSM13 during selection was demonstrated by a higher percentage of positive clones isolated from an antibody library after two selection rounds on a complex cellular target. We conclude that the CT helper phage considerably improves the efficiency of selections using phagemid-based protein libraries.
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