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Deletion of murine kininogen gene 1 (mKng1) causes loss of plasma kininogen and delays thrombosis.


ABSTRACT: High-molecular-weight kininogen (HK) plays an important role in the assembly of the plasma kallikrein-kinin system. While the human genome contains a single copy of the kininogen gene, 3 copies exist in the rat (1 encoding K-kininogen and 2 encoding T-kininogen). Here, we confirm that the mouse genome contains 2 homologous kininogen genes, mKng1 and mKng2, and demonstrate that these genes are expressed in a tissue-specific manner. To determine the roles of these genes in murine development and physiology, we disrupted mKng1, which is expressed primarily in the liver. mKng1(-/-) mice were viable, but lacked plasma HK and low-molecular-weight kininogen (LK), as well as DeltamHK-D5, a novel kininogen isoform that lacks kininogen domain 5. Moreover, despite normal tail vein bleeding times, mKng1(-/-) mice displayed a significantly prolonged time to carotid artery occlusion following Rose Bengal administration and laser-induced arterial injury. These results suggest that a single gene, mKng1, is responsible for production of plasma kininogen, and that plasma HK contributes to induced arterial thrombosis in mice.

SUBMITTER: Merkulov S 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC2214772 | biostudies-literature | 2008 Feb

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Deletion of murine kininogen gene 1 (mKng1) causes loss of plasma kininogen and delays thrombosis.

Merkulov Sergei S   Zhang Wan-Ming WM   Komar Anton A AA   Schmaier Alvin H AH   Barnes Ellen E   Zhou Yihua Y   Lu Xincheng X   Iwaki Takayuki T   Castellino Francis J FJ   Luo Guangbin G   McCrae Keith R KR  

Blood 20071113 3


High-molecular-weight kininogen (HK) plays an important role in the assembly of the plasma kallikrein-kinin system. While the human genome contains a single copy of the kininogen gene, 3 copies exist in the rat (1 encoding K-kininogen and 2 encoding T-kininogen). Here, we confirm that the mouse genome contains 2 homologous kininogen genes, mKng1 and mKng2, and demonstrate that these genes are expressed in a tissue-specific manner. To determine the roles of these genes in murine development and p  ...[more]

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