130 research outputs found

    A POGLUT1 mutation causes a muscular dystrophy with reduced Notch signaling and satellite cell loss

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    Skeletal muscle regeneration by muscle satellite cells is a physiological mechanism activated upon muscle damage and regulated by Notch signaling. In a family with autosomal recessive limb-girdle muscular dystrophy, we identified a missense mutation in 1 (protein O -glucosyltransferase 1), an enzyme involved in Notch posttranslational modification and function. In vitro and in vivo experiments demonstrated that the mutation reduces O -glucosyltransferase activity on Notch and impairs muscle development. Muscles from patients revealed decreased Notch signaling, dramatic reduction in satellite cell pool and a muscle-specific α-dystroglycan hypoglycosylation not present in patients' fibroblasts. Primary myoblasts from patients showed slow proliferation, facilitated differentiation, and a decreased pool of quiescent 7 + cells. A robust rescue of the myogenesis was demonstrated by increasing Notch signaling. None of these alterations were found in muscles from secondary dystroglycanopathy patients. These data suggest that a key pathomechanism for this novel form of muscular dystrophy is Notch-dependent loss of satellite cells

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    Regulation of signal transduction by glycosylation

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    Notchの<i>O</i>-型糖鎖修飾の真の機能とは?

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    What are the Real Functions of <i>O</i>-Glycan Modifications of Notch?

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    Unsweetened Notch leads to myeloproliferation

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    The article by Zhou and colleagues in this issue of Blood highlights the importance of Notch glycosylation in suppression of myelogenesis
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