5 research outputs found

    Les phosphoinositides, des lipides acteurs essentiels du trafic intracellulaire

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    International audiencePhosphoinositides (PPIn) are lipids involved in the vesicular transport of proteins between the different intracellular compartments. They act by recruiting and/or activating effector proteins and are thus involved in crucial cellular functions including vesicle budding, fusion and dynamics of membranes and regulation of the cytoskeleton. Although they are present in low concentrations in membranes, their activity is essential for cell survival and needs to be tightly controlled. Therefore, phosphatases and kinases specific of the various cellular membranes can phosphorylate/dephosphorylate their inositol ring on the positions D3, D4 and/or D5. The differential phosphoryla-tion determines the intracellular localisation and the activity of the PPIn. Indeed, non-phosphorylated phosphatidylinositol (PtdIns) is the basic component of the PPIn and can be found in all eukaryotic cells at the cytoplasmic face of the ER, the Golgi, mitochondria and microsomes. It can get phosphorylated on position D4 to obtain PtdIns4P, a PPIn enriched in the Golgi compartment and involved in the maintenance of this organelle as well as anterograde and retrograde transport to and from the Golgi. PtdIns phosphorylation on position D3 results in PtdIns3P that is required for endosomal transport and multivesicular body (MVB) formation and sorting. These monophosphorylated PtdIns can be further phosphorylated to produce bisphophory-lated PtdIns. Thus, PtdIns(4,5)P2, mainly produced by PtdIns4P phosphorylation, is enriched in the plasma membrane and involved in the regulation of actin cytoskeleton and endocytosis. PtdIns(3,5)P2, mainly produced by PtdIns3P phosphorylation, is enriched in late endosomes, MVBs and the lysosome/vacuole and plays a role in endo-some to vacuole transport. PtdIns(3,4)P2 is absent in yeast, cells and mainly produced by PtdIns4P phosphorylation in human cells; PtdIns(3,4)P2 is localised in the plasma membrane and plays an important role as a second messenger by recruiting specificLes phosphoinositides sont des lipides impliquĂ©s dans le transport vĂ©siculaire des protĂ©ines entre les diffĂ©rents compartiments. Ils agissent par le recrutement et/ou l’activation de protĂ©ines effectrices et sont de ce fait impliquĂ©s dans la rĂ©gulation de diffĂ©rentes fonctions cellulaires telles que le bourgeonnement vĂ©siculaire, la fusion ou la dynamique des membranes et du cytosquelette. Bien que prĂ©sents en faible concentration dans les membranes, leur rĂŽle est indispensable Ă  la survie des cellules et doit ĂȘtre rĂ©gulĂ© avec prĂ©cision. Le contrĂŽle de leur fonction se fait par la phosphorylation/dĂ©phosphorylation des positions D3, D4 et/ou D5 de leur anneau inositol par des kinases et phosphatases spĂ©cifiques des diffĂ©rentes membranes intracellulaires. Ces enzymes sont en partie conservĂ©es entre la levure et l’Homme et leur perte de fonction peut entraĂźner des maladies gĂ©nĂ©tiques graves comme les myopathies

    WANTED – Dead or alive: Myotubularins, a large disease-associated protein family

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    Myotubularins define a large family of proteins conserved through evolution. Several members are mutated in different neuromuscular diseases including centronuclear myopathies and Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) neuropathies, or are linked to a predisposition to obesity and cancer. While some members have phosphatase activity against the 3-phosphate of phosphoinositides, regulating the phosphorylation status of PtdIns3P and PtdIns(3,5)P2 implicated in membrane trafficking and autophagy, and producing PtdIns5P, others lack key residues in the catalytic site and are classified as dead-phosphatases. However, these dead phosphatases regulate phosphoinositide-dependent cellular pathways by binding to catalytically active myotubularins. Here we review previous studies on the molecular regulation and physiological roles of myotubularins. We also used the recent myotubularins three-dimensional structures to underline key residues that are mutated in neuromuscular diseases and required for enzymatic activity. In addition, through database mining and analysis, expression profile and specific isoforms of the different myotubularins are described in depth, as well as a revisited protein interaction network. Comparison of the interactome and expression data for each myotubularin highlights specific protein complexes and tissues where myotubularins should have a key regulatory role

    Expression of the neuropathy-associated MTMR2 gene rescues MTM1-associated myopathy

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    Myotubularins (MTMs) are active or dead phosphoinositides phosphatases defining a large protein family conserved through evolution and implicated in different neuromuscular diseases. Loss-of-function mutations in MTM1 cause the severe congenital myopathy called myotubular myopathy (or X-linked centronuclear myopathy) while mutations in the MTM1-related protein MTMR2 cause a recessive Charcot-Marie-Tooth peripheral neuropathy. Here we aimed to determine the functional specificity and redundancy of MTM1 and MTMR2, and to assess their abilities to compensate for a potential therapeutic strategy. Using molecular investigations and heterologous expression of human MTMs in yeast cells and in Mtm1 knockout mice, we characterized several naturally occurring MTMR2 isoforms with different activities. We identified the N-terminal domain as responsible for functional differences between MTM1 and MTMR2. An N-terminal extension observed in MTMR2 is absent in MTM1, and only the short MTMR2 isoform lacking this N-terminal extension behaved similarly to MTM1 in yeast and mice. Moreover, adeno-associated virus-mediated exogenous expression of several MTMR2 isoforms ameliorates the myopathic phenotype owing to MTM1 loss, with increased muscle force, reduced myofiber atrophy, and reduction of the intracellular disorganization hallmarks associated with myotubular myopathy. Noteworthy, the short MTMR2 isoform provided a better rescue when compared with the long MTMR2 isoform. In conclusion, these results point to the molecular basis for MTMs functional specificity. They also provide the proof-of-concept that expression of the neuropathy-associated MTMR2 gene improves the MTM1-associated myopathy, thus identifying MTMR2 as a novel therapeutic target for myotubular myopathy

    Etude des différences moléculaires et fonctionnelles entre MTM1 et MTMR2 afin de mieux comprendre deux maladies neuromusculaires

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    MTM1 and MTMR2 are 2 phosphatases of phosphoinositides that belong to the myotubularin family conserved through evolution. Despite their high level of similarity, mutations in MTM1 lead to the severe XLCNM myopathy while mutations in MTMR2 lead to the CMT4B neuropathy. The molecular bases for the surprising tissue-specific functions of these ubiquitously expressed proteins was unclear. Moreover, there is no specific therapy for these diseases.I first characterized the activity of the two naturally occurring isoforms of MTMR2, that we named MTMR2-L (long) and MTMR2-S (short). I found that the functional differences between MTM1 and MTMR2 reside mostly in the N-terminal extension of MTMR2-L, and that the endogenous MTMR2-S isoform lacking this N-terminal extension behaves similarly as MTM1. Then, using the myopathic Mtm1 KO mouse and AAV-mediated expression, I showed that exogenous expression of MTMR2 isoforms, and specifically of MTMR2-S, strongly improved the muscle atrophy, muscle force and the histological hallmarks of the myopathic mice. These data reveal a first molecular basis for the functional specificities of MTM1 and MTMR2, and highlight MTMR2 as a therapeutic target for XLCNM myopathy.MTM1 et MTMR2 sont 2 phosphatases de phosphoinositides appartenant Ă  la famille des myotubularines, conservĂ©e pendant l’évolution. Bien qu’étant trĂšs similaires, des mutations dans MTM1 entraĂźnent la sĂ©vĂšre myopathie XLCNM alors que les mutations dans MTMR2 entraĂźnent la neuropathie CMT4B. On ne comprend pas encore les bases molĂ©culaires de cette spĂ©cificitĂ© de tissu, et il n’existe aucun traitement spĂ©cifique pour ces maladies. J’ai tout d’abord caractĂ©risĂ© l’activitĂ© des 2 isoformes endogĂšnes de MTMR2, nommĂ©s MTMR2-L et MTMR2-S. J’ai dĂ©montrĂ© que la diffĂ©rence fonctionnelle entre MTM1 et MTMR2 s’explique principalement par l’extension N-terminale de MTMR2, et que l’isoforme MTMR2-S dĂ©pourvu de cette extension entraĂźne les mĂȘmes phĂ©notypes que MTM1. Ensuite, grĂące Ă  l’injection d’AAV dans les souris Mtm1 KO, j’ai dĂ©montrĂ© que l’expression exogĂšne des isoformes de MTMR2, et surtout de MTMR2-S, amĂ©liore grandement l’atrophie musculaire, la force musculaire et les marqueurs histologiques de ces souris myopathiques. Ces rĂ©sultats rĂ©vĂšlent une premiĂšre base molĂ©culaire expliquant les spĂ©cificitĂ©s fonctionnelles de MTM1 et MTMR2, et montrent que MTMR2 est une cible thĂ©rapeutique potentielle pour la myopathie XLCNM

    Expression of the neuropathy-associated MTMR2 gene rescues MTM1-associated myopathy

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    Myotubularins (MTMs) are active or dead phosphoinositides phosphatases defining a large protein family conserved through evolution and implicated in different neuromuscular diseases. Loss-of-function mutations in MTM1 cause the severe congenital myopathy called myotubular myopathy (or X-linked centronuclear myopathy) while mutations in the MTM1-related protein MTMR2 cause a recessive Charcot-Marie-Tooth peripheral neuropathy. Here we aimed to determine the functional specificity and redundancy of MTM1 and MTMR2, and to assess their abilities to compensate for a potential therapeutic strategy. Using molecular investigations and heterologous expression of human MTMs in yeast cells and in Mtm1 knockout mice, we characterized several naturally occurring MTMR2 isoforms with different activities. We identified the N-terminal domain as responsible for functional differences between MTM1 and MTMR2. An N-terminal extension observed in MTMR2 is absent in MTM1, and only the short MTMR2 isoform lacking this N-terminal extension behaved similarly to MTM1 in yeast and mice. Moreover, adeno-associated virus-mediated exogenous expression of several MTMR2 isoforms ameliorates the myopathic phenotype owing to MTM1 loss, with increased muscle force, reduced myofiber atrophy, and reduction of the intracellular disorganization hallmarks associated with myotubular myopathy. Noteworthy, the short MTMR2 isoform provided a better rescue when compared with the long MTMR2 isoform. In conclusion, these results point to the molecular basis for MTMs functional specificity. They also provide the proof-of-concept that expression of the neuropathy-associated MTMR2 gene improves the MTM1-associated myopathy, thus identifying MTMR2 as a novel therapeutic target for myotubular myopathy
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