A zebrafish model of PMM2-CDG reveals altered neurogenesis and a substrate-accumulation mechanism for N-linked glycosylation deficiency.
Abigail Cline, Ningguo Gao, Heather Flanagan-Steet, Vandana Sharma, Sabrina Rosa, Roberto Sonon, Parastoo Azadi, Kirsten C Sadler, Hudson H Freeze, Mark A Lehrman, Richard Steet
Index: Mol. Biol. Cell 23(21) , 4175-87, (2012)
Full Text: HTML
Abstract
Congenital disorder of glycosylation (PMM2-CDG) results from mutations in pmm2, which encodes the phosphomannomutase (Pmm) that converts mannose-6-phosphate (M6P) to mannose-1-phosphate (M1P). Patients have wide-spectrum clinical abnormalities associated with impaired protein N-glycosylation. Although it has been widely proposed that Pmm2 deficiency depletes M1P, a precursor of GDP-mannose, and consequently suppresses lipid-linked oligosaccharide (LLO) levels needed for N-glycosylation, these deficiencies have not been demonstrated in patients or any animal model. Here we report a morpholino-based PMM2-CDG model in zebrafish. Morphant embryos had developmental abnormalities consistent with PMM2-CDG patients, including craniofacial defects and impaired motility associated with altered motor neurogenesis within the spinal cord. Significantly, global N-linked glycosylation and LLO levels were reduced in pmm2 morphants. Although M1P and GDP-mannose were below reliable detection/quantification limits, Pmm2 depletion unexpectedly caused accumulation of M6P, shown earlier to promote LLO cleavage in vitro. In pmm2 morphants, the free glycan by-products of LLO cleavage increased nearly twofold. Suppression of the M6P-synthesizing enzyme mannose phosphate isomerase within the pmm2 background normalized M6P levels and certain aspects of the craniofacial phenotype and abrogated pmm2-dependent LLO cleavage. In summary, we report the first zebrafish model of PMM2-CDG and uncover novel cellular insights not possible with other systems, including an M6P accumulation mechanism for underglycosylation.
Related Compounds
Related Articles:
2013-01-10
[Carbohydr. Res. 365 , 52-60, (2013)]
2013-06-18
[Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 110(25) , 10246-51, (2013)]
2011-09-01
[Mol. Biol. Cell 22(17) , 2994-3009, (2011)]
2012-10-01
[Biomaterials , (2012)]
2015-01-19
[J. Cell Biol. 208(2) , 171-80, (2015)]