| Literature DB >> 33277363 |
Silvia Nitschke1, Erin E Chown2, Xiaochu Zhao2, Shoghig Gabrielian2, Sara Petković2, Dikran R Guisso3, Ami M Perri2, Peixiang Wang2, Saija Ahonen2, Felix Nitschke4, Berge A Minassian5.
Abstract
Malstructured glycogen accumulates over time in Lafora disease (LD) and precipitates into Lafora bodies (LBs), leading to neurodegeneration and intractable fatal epilepsy. Constitutive reduction of glycogen synthase-1 (GYS1) activity prevents murine LD, but the effect of GYS1 reduction later in disease course is unknown. Our goal was to knock out Gys1 in laforin (Epm2a)-deficient LD mice after disease onset to determine whether LD can be halted in midcourse, or even reversed. We generated Epm2a-deficient LD mice with tamoxifen-inducible Cre-mediated Gys1 knockout. Tamoxifen was administered at 4 months and disease progression assessed at 12 months. We verified successful knockout at mRNA and protein levels using droplet digital PCR and Western blots. Glycogen determination and periodic acid-Schiff-diastase staining were used to analyze glycogen and LB accumulation. Immunohistochemistry using astrocytic (glial fibrillary acidic protein) and microglial (ionized calcium-binding adapter molecule 1) markers was performed to investigate neuroinflammation. In the disease-relevant organ, the brain, Gys1 mRNA levels were reduced by 85% and GYS1 protein depleted. Glycogen accumulation was halted at the 4-month level, while LB formation and neuroinflammation were significantly, though incompletely, prevented. Skeletal muscle analysis confirmed that Gys1 knockout inhibits glycogen and LB accumulation. However, tamoxifen-independent Cre recombination precluded determination of disease halting or reversal in this tissue. Our study shows that Gys1 knockdown is a powerful means to prevent LD progression, but this approach did not reduce brain glycogen or LBs to levels below those at the time of intervention. These data suggest that endogenous mechanisms to clear brain LBs are absent or, possibly, compromised in laforin-deficient murine LD.Entities:
Keywords: Lafora bodies; Lafora disease (Lafora progressive myoclonic epilepsy, MELF); glycogen; glycogen storage disease; glycogen synthase; neurodegenerative disease; neuroinflammation
Year: 2020 PMID: 33277363 PMCID: PMC7857511 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.RA120.015773
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157