Abstract

Lafora disease (LD) is an autosomal recessive neurodegenerative disease that results in progressive myoclonus epilepsy and death. LD is caused by mutations in either the E3 ubiquitin ligase malin or the dual specificity phosphatase laforin. A hallmark of LD is the accumulation of insoluble glycogen in the cytoplasm of cells from most tissues. Glycogen metabolism is regulated by phosphorylation of key metabolic enzymes. One regulator of this phosphorylation is protein targeting to glycogen (PTG/R5), a scaffold protein that binds both glycogen and many of the enzymes involved in glycogen synthesis, including protein phosphatase 1 (PP1), glycogen synthase, phosphorylase, and laforin. Overexpression of PTG markedly increases glycogen accumulation, and decreased PTG expression decreases glycogen stores. To investigate if malin and laforin play a role in glycogen metabolism, we overexpressed PTG, malin, and laforin in tissue culture cells. We found that expression of malin or laforin decreased PTG-stimulated glycogen accumulation by 25%, and co-expression of malin and laforin abolished PTG-stimulated glycogen accumulation. Consistent with this result, we found that malin ubiquitinates PTG in a laforin-dependent manner, both in vivo and in vitro, and targets PTG for proteasome-dependent degradation. These results suggest an additional mechanism, involving laforin and malin, in regulating glycogen metabolism.

Highlights

  • Among the progressive myoclonus epilepsies because of the rapid neurological deterioration of the patient and the accumulation of cytoplasmic non-proteinacious inclusion bodies called Lafora bodies (LBs)

  • 3 The abbreviations used are: LD, Lafora disease; LB, Lafora bodies; IP, immunoprecipitation; CBM, carbohydrate binding modules; PP1, protein phosphatase 1; CHO, Chinese hamster ovary; HRP, horseradish peroxidase; GST, glutathione S-transferase; PTG, protein targeting to glycogen; EPM2A, epilepsy myoclonus gene 2A

  • Despite the ubiquitination of PTG by malin, we were unable to detect a direct interaction between malin and PTG and postulate that laforin acts as a scaffold protein to facilitate PTG ubiquitination by malin

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Summary

Malin Promotes the Degradation of PTG

Malin was recently shown to ubiquitinate glycogen debranching enzyme (AGL/GDE) and target it for degradation as well [29]. We demonstrate that malin ubiquitinates protein targeting to glycogen (PTG/R5), a regulatory subunit of protein phosphatase 1 (PP1). This ubiquitination both targets PTG for degradation and inhibits glycogen accumulation. Despite the ubiquitination of PTG by malin, we were unable to detect a direct interaction between malin and PTG and postulate that laforin acts as a scaffold protein to facilitate PTG ubiquitination by malin. These results suggest that malin degrades multiple enzymes involved in glycogen metabolism to tightly control this process. When malin is defective glycogen metabolism proceeds aberrantly and LBs are produced

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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