AI Article Synopsis

  • - Lafora disease is a severe epilepsy that typically starts in teenagers and leads to neurodegeneration and death within a decade, marked by the accumulation of abnormal glycogen-like structures called Lafora bodies in various tissues.
  • - Around 50% of Lafora disease cases are caused by mutations in the EPM2A gene, which normally helps regulate glycogen phosphate levels through the protein laforin.
  • - Research on mice without laforin shows that over time, glycogen becomes overly phosphorylated and poorly structured, leading to aggregation that interferes with normal glycogen metabolism.

Article Abstract

Lafora disease is a progressive myoclonus epilepsy with onset in the teenage years followed by neurodegeneration and death within 10 years. A characteristic is the widespread formation of poorly branched, insoluble glycogen-like polymers (polyglucosan) known as Lafora bodies, which accumulate in neurons, muscle, liver, and other tissues. Approximately half of the cases of Lafora disease result from mutations in the EPM2A gene, which encodes laforin, a member of the dual specificity protein phosphatase family that is able to release the small amount of covalent phosphate normally present in glycogen. In studies of Epm2a(-/-) mice that lack laforin, we observed a progressive change in the properties and structure of glycogen that paralleled the formation of Lafora bodies. At three months, glycogen metabolism remained essentially normal, even though the phosphorylation of glycogen has increased 4-fold and causes altered physical properties of the polysaccharide. By 9 months, the glycogen has overaccumulated by 3-fold, has become somewhat more phosphorylated, but, more notably, is now poorly branched, is insoluble in water, and has acquired an abnormal morphology visible by electron microscopy. These glycogen molecules have a tendency to aggregate and can be recovered in the pellet after low speed centrifugation of tissue extracts. The aggregation requires the phosphorylation of glycogen. The aggregrated glycogen sequesters glycogen synthase but not other glycogen metabolizing enzymes. We propose that laforin functions to suppress excessive glycogen phosphorylation and is an essential component of the metabolism of normally structured glycogen.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2590708PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M807428200DOI Listing

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