1. Academic Validation
  2. Characterization of a novel hematopoietic marker expressed from early embryonic hematopoietic stem cells to adult mature lineages

Characterization of a novel hematopoietic marker expressed from early embryonic hematopoietic stem cells to adult mature lineages

  • Blood Cells Mol Dis. 2002 Sep-Oct;29(2):236-48. doi: 10.1006/bcmd.2002.0563.
Stéphane Prost 1 Magali LeDiscorde Rima Haddad Jean-Claude Gluckman Bruno Canque Marek Kirszenbaum
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Commissariat à l'Energie Atomique, Direction des Sciences du Vivant, Département de Recherche Médicale Service de Neurovirologie, Fontenay aux Roses, France.
Abstract

A novel membrane protein has been identified in the course of screening for differentially expressed cDNAs in human embryonic hematopoietic sites. This 37- to 38-kDa molecule, designated KLIP-1 (killer lineage protein), consisting of 350 Amino acids and containing five transmembrane domains, is encoded by the 5093-bp KLIP-1 gene, composed of nine exons and located on chromosome 6 (6p21.1-6p21.2). We found the KLIP-1 protein to be expressed by nucleated hematopoietic cells, from early embryonic hematopoietic stem cells through mature adult blood lymphoid lineages, either as membrane or as cytoplasmic molecules. In day-30/32 human embryo sections, KLIP-1 protein expression is restricted to circulating hematopoietic cells at hematopoiesis sites. Membrane KLIP-1 is expressed by fetal and adult GP-A(+) erythroblasts, the fetal liver CD34(+) subset, fetal spleen, and adult bone marrow CD56(+) NK and CD19(+) B cells. Among mature blood cells, surface KLIP-1 expression is restricted to CD56(+) NK cells, indicating KLIP-1 to be a novel marker of this population. Altogether, these results indicate that membrane export of KLIP-1 antigen is developmentally and ontogenetically regulated. The high degree of conservation of the KLIP-1 protein sequence among mammals strongly suggests that it plays an important role during hematopoiesis and may exercise similar functions in human and mouse blood cells. The KLIP-1 molecule may therefore constitute a powerful tool for improving knowledge of both human hematopoiesis and NK cell ontogeny and immune functions.

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