Publication | Open Access
Piezo1 plays a role in erythrocyte volume homeostasis
150
Citations
20
References
2013
Year
EngineeringBlood CellCytoskeletonMechanotransductionCellular PhysiologyHematologyStretch-activated Ion ChannelsCell SignalingPiezo GenesCell PhysiologyMechanobiologyErythrocyte Volume HomeostasisMolecular PhysiologyIon ChannelsMorphogenesisVascular BiologyMechanosensingCell BiomechanicsCell BiologySignal TransductionDevelopmental BiologyZebrafish DevelopmentPhysiologyCell MotilityMedicine
Mechanosensitivity is an inherent property of virtually all cell types, allowing them to sense and respond to physical environmental stimuli. Stretch-activated ion channels represent a class of mechanosensitive proteins which allow cells to respond rapidly to changes in membrane tension; however their identity has remained elusive. The piezo genes have recently been identified as a family of stretch-activated mechanosensitive ion channels. We set out to determine the role of piezo1 during zebrafish development. Here we report that morpholino-mediated knockdown of piezo1 impairs erythrocyte survival without affecting hematopoiesis or differentiation. Our results demonstrate that piezo1 is involved in erythrocyte volume homeostasis, disruption of which results in swelling/lysis of red blood cells and consequent anemia.
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