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Abnormal glycogen chain length pattern, not hyperphosphorylation, is critical in Lafora disease
Author(s) -
Nitschke Felix,
Sullivan Mitchell A,
Wang Peixiang,
Zhao Xiaochu,
Chown Erin E,
Perri Ami M,
Israelian Lori,
JuanaLópez Lucia,
Bovolenta Paola,
Rodríguez de Córdoba Santiago,
Steup Martin,
Minassian Berge A
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
embo molecular medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.923
H-Index - 107
eISSN - 1757-4684
pISSN - 1757-4676
DOI - 10.15252/emmm.201707608
Subject(s) - lafora disease , phosphatase , glycogen , hyperphosphorylation , glycogen synthase , progressive myoclonus epilepsy , dual specificity phosphatase , biology , autophagy , microbiology and biotechnology , endocrinology , biochemistry , phosphorylation , gene , apoptosis
Lafora disease ( LD ) is a fatal progressive epilepsy essentially caused by loss‐of‐function mutations in the glycogen phosphatase laforin or the ubiquitin E3 ligase malin. Glycogen in LD is hyperphosphorylated and poorly hydrosoluble. It precipitates and accumulates into neurotoxic Lafora bodies ( LB s). The leading LD hypothesis that hyperphosphorylation causes the insolubility was recently challenged by the observation that phosphatase‐inactive laforin rescues the laforin‐deficient LD mouse model, apparently through correction of a general autophagy impairment. We were for the first time able to quantify brain glycogen phosphate. We also measured glycogen content and chain lengths, LB s, and autophagy markers in several laforin‐ or malin‐deficient mouse lines expressing phosphatase‐inactive laforin. We find that: (i) in laforin‐deficient mice, phosphatase‐inactive laforin corrects glycogen chain lengths, and not hyperphosphorylation, which leads to correction of glycogen amounts and prevention of LB s; (ii) in malin‐deficient mice, phosphatase‐inactive laforin confers no correction; (iii) general impairment of autophagy is not necessary in LD . We conclude that laforin's principle function is to control glycogen chain lengths, in a malin‐dependent fashion, and that loss of this control underlies LD .

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