AI Article Synopsis

  • Lafora progressive myoclonus epilepsy is a serious neurological disorder that starts in healthy teenagers and leads to cognitive decline, severe epilepsy, and ultimately death due to neurodegeneration and the formation of Lafora bodies.
  • Lafora bodies are abnormal starch-like deposits caused by an imbalance in glycogen metabolism related to the enzymes glycogen synthase and glycogen branching enzyme.
  • Research shows that laforin not only binds to these polyglucosans but also acts as a phosphatase for GSK3, which can inhibit glycogen synthase activity and promote its degradation through malin, suggesting a regulatory feedback mechanism to control glycogen synthesis.

Article Abstract

Lafora progressive myoclonus epilepsy, caused by defective laforin or malin, insidiously present in normal teenagers with cognitive decline, followed by rapidly intractable epilepsy, dementia and death. Pathology reveals neurodegeneration with neurofibrillary tangle formation and Lafora bodies (LBs). LBs are deposits of starch-like polyglucosans, insufficiently branched and hence insoluble glycogen molecules resulting from glycogen synthase (GS) overactivity relative to glycogen branching enzyme activity. We previously made the unexpected observation that laforin, in the absence of which polyglucosans accumulate, specifically binds polyglucosans. This suggested that laforin's role is to detect polyglucosan appearances during glycogen synthesis and to initiate mechanisms to downregulate GS. Glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK3) is the principal inhibitor of GS. Dephosphorylation of GSK3 at Ser 9 activates GSK3 to inhibit GS through phosphorylation at multiple sites. Glucose-6-phosphate is a potent allosteric activator of GS. Glucose-6-phosphate levels are high when the amount of glucose increases and its activation of GS overrides any phospho-inhibition. Here, we show that laforin is a GSK3 Ser 9 phosphatase, and therefore capable of inactivating GS through GSK3. We also show that laforin interacts with malin and that malin is an E3 ubiquitin ligase that binds GS. We propose that laforin, in response to appearance of polyglucosans, directs two negative feedback pathways: polyglucosan-laforin-GSK3-GS to inhibit GS activity and polyglucosan-laforin-malin-GS to remove GS through proteasomal degradation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddi306DOI Listing

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