Skeletal Muscle Glycogen Chain Length Correlates with Insolubility in Mouse Models of Polyglucosan-Associated Neurodegenerative Diseases
Author(s) -
Mitchell A. Sullivan,
Silvia Nitschke,
Evan P. Skwara,
Peixiang Wang,
Xiaochu Zhao,
Xiao Shan Pan,
Erin E. Chown,
Travis Wang,
Ami M. Perri,
Jennifer P.Y. Lee,
Francisco Vilaplana,
Berge A. Minassian,
Felix Nitschké
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
cell reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.264
H-Index - 154
eISSN - 2639-1856
pISSN - 2211-1247
DOI - 10.1016/j.celrep.2019.04.017
Subject(s) - glycogen , lafora disease , glycogen branching enzyme , glycogen synthase , biochemistry , glycogen storage disease , chemistry , skeletal muscle , glycogen debranching enzyme , in vivo , biology , phosphorylation , endocrinology , genetics , phosphatase
Lafora disease (LD) and adult polyglucosan body disease (APBD) are glycogen storage diseases characterized by a pathogenic buildup of insoluble glycogen. Mechanisms causing glycogen insolubility are poorly understood. Here, in two mouse models of LD (Epm2a -/- and Epm2b -/- ) and one of APBD (Gbe1 ys/ys ), the separation of soluble and insoluble muscle glycogen is described, enabling separate analysis of each fraction. Total glycogen is increased in LD and APBD mice, which, together with abnormal chain length and molecule size distributions, is largely if not fully attributed to insoluble glycogen. Soluble glycogen consists of molecules with distinct chain length distributions and differential corresponding solubility, providing a mechanistic link between soluble and insoluble glycogen in vivo. Phosphorylation states differ across glycogen fractions and mouse models, demonstrating that hyperphosphorylation is not a basic feature of insoluble glycogen. Lastly, model-specific variances in protein and activity levels of key glycogen synthesis enzymes suggest uninvestigated regulatory mechanisms.
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