4.5 Article

Cohen syndrome is associated with major glycosylation defects

期刊

HUMAN MOLECULAR GENETICS
卷 23, 期 9, 页码 2391-2399

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OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddt630

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资金

  1. French Ministry of Health (PHRC) [A00103-42]
  2. Regional Council of Burgundy [STIC11]
  3. Agence Nationale Recherche Jeune Chercheur grant
  4. Equipe de Recherche Associee-Net for Research Programmes (EURO-CDG) [ERARE11-135]

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Cohen syndrome (CS) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder with multisytemic clinical features due to mutations in the VPS13B gene, which has recently been described encoding a mandatory membrane protein involved in Golgi integrity. As the Golgi complex is the place where glycosylation of newly synthesized proteins occurs, we hypothesized that VPS13B deficiency, responsible of Golgi apparatus disturbance, could lead to glycosylation defects and/or mysfunction of this organelle, and thus be a cause of the main clinical manifestations of CS. The glycosylation status of CS serum proteins showed a very unusual pattern of glycosylation characterized by a significant accumulation of agalactosylated fucosylated structures as well as asialylated fucosylated structures demonstrating a major defect of glycan maturation in CS. However, CS transferrin and 1-AT profiles, two liver-derived proteins, were normal. We also showed that intercellular cell adhesion molecule 1 and LAMP-2, two highly glycosylated cellular proteins, presented an altered migration profile on SDSPAGE in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from CS patients. RNA interference against VPS13B confirmed these glycosylation defects. Experiments with Brefeldin A demonstrated that intracellular retrograde cell trafficking was normal in CS fibroblasts. Furthermore, early endosomes were almost absent in these cells and lysosomes were abnormally enlarged, suggesting a crucial role of VPS13B in endosomallysosomal trafficking. Our work provides evidence that CS is associated to a tissue-specific major defect of glycosylation and endosomallysosomal trafficking defect, suggesting that this could be a new key element to decipher the mechanisms of CS physiopathology.

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