AI Article Synopsis

  • Lafora disease is a progressive form of myoclonus epilepsy caused by mutations in the EPM2A or EPM2B genes, which lead to abnormal glycogen accumulation in various organs, including the brain and muscles.
  • Research on mouse models lacking these genes showed decreased autophagy and proteasomal activity linked to disrupted protein degradation pathways, although their response to ER stress remained unaffected.
  • The findings suggest that both laforin and malin mutations affect cellular quality control processes, possibly due to the overaccumulation of glycogen, with evidence indicating that malin has a role that is independent of laforin in lysosomal function.

Article Abstract

Lafora disease is a progressive myoclonus epilepsy caused by mutations in the EPM2A or EPM2B genes that encode a glycogen phosphatase, laforin, and an E3 ubiquitin ligase, malin, respectively. Lafora disease is characterized by accumulation of insoluble, poorly branched, hyperphosphorylated glycogen in brain, muscle, heart, and liver. The laforinmalin complex has been proposed to play a role in the regulation of glycogen metabolism and protein quality control. We evaluated three arms of the protein degradation/ quality control process (the autophago-lysosomal pathway, the ubiquitin-proteasomal pathway, and the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress response) in mouse embryonic fibroblasts from Epm2a(-/-), Epm2b(-/-), and Epm2a(-/-) Epm2b(-/-) mice. The levels of LC3-II, a marker of autophagy, were decreased in all knock-out cells as compared with wild type even though they still showed a slight response to starvation and rapamycin. Furthermore, ribosomal protein S6 kinase and S6 phosphorylation were increased. Under basal conditions there was no effect on the levels of ubiquitinated proteins in the knock-out cells, but ubiquitinated protein degradation was decreased during starvation or stress. Lack of malin (Epm2b(-/-) and Epm2a(-/-) Epm2b(-/-) cells) but not laforin (Epm2a(-/-) cells) decreased LAMP1, a lysosomal marker. CHOP expression was similar in wild type and knock-out cells under basal conditions or with ER stress-inducing agents. In conclusion, both laforin and malin knock-out cells display mTOR-dependent autophagy defects and reduced proteasomal activity but no defects in the ER stress response. We speculate that these defects may be secondary to glycogen overaccumulation. This study also suggests a malin function independent of laforin, possibly in lysosomal biogenesis and/or lysosomal glycogen disposal.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4110273PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M114.580167DOI Listing

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