Defects in blood development frequently occur among syndromic congenital anomalies. Thrombocytopenia-Absent Radius (TAR) syndrome is a rare congenital condition with reduced platelets (hypomegakaryocytic thrombocytopenia) and forelimb anomalies, concurrent with more variable heart and kidney defects. TAR syndrome associates with hypomorphic gene function for that encodes a component of the exon junction complex involved in mRNA splicing, transport, and nonsense-mediated decay. How perturbing a general mRNA-processing factor causes the selective TAR Syndrome phenotypes remains unknown. Here, we connect zebrafish perturbation to early hematopoietic defects via attenuated non-canonical Wnt/Planar Cell Polarity (PCP) signaling that controls developmental cell re-arrangements. In hypomorphic zebrafish, we observe a significant reduction of -positive thrombocytes. -mutant zebrafish embryos accumulate mRNAs with individual retained introns, a hallmark of defective nonsense-mediated decay; affected mRNAs include transcripts for non-canonical Wnt/PCP pathway components. We establish that -mutant embryos show convergent extension defects and that reduced function interacts with perturbations in non-canonical Wnt/PCP pathway genes w, , , and . Using live-imaging, we found reduced function impairs the architecture of the lateral plate mesoderm (LPM) that forms hematopoietic, cardiovascular, kidney, and forelimb skeleton progenitors as affected in TAR Syndrome. Both mutants for and for the PCP gene feature impaired expression of early hematopoietic/endothelial genes including and the megakaryocyte regulator . Together, our data propose aberrant LPM patterning and hematopoietic defects as consequence of attenuated non-canonical Wnt/PCP signaling upon reduced function. These results also link TAR Syndrome to a potential LPM origin and a developmental mechanism.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10120739PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.04.12.536513DOI Listing

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