
handle: 10261/150933
Danon disease, a condition characterized by cardiomyopathy, myopathy, and intellectual disability, is caused by mutations in the LAMP-2 gene. Lamp-2A protein, generated by alternative splicing from the Lamp-2 pre-mRNA, is reported to be the lysosomal membrane receptor essential for the chaperone-mediated autophagic pathway (CMA) aimed to selective protein targeting and translocation into the lysosomal lumen for degradation. To study the relevance of Lamp-2 in protein degradation, a lymphoblastoid cell line was obtained by EBV transformation of B-cells from a Danon patient. The derived cell line showed no significant expression of Lamp-2 protein. The steady-state mRNA and protein levels of alpha-synuclein, IΚBα, Rcan1, and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, four proteins reported to be selective substrates of the CMA pathway, were similar in control and Lamp-2-deficient cells. Inhibition of protein synthesis showed that the half-life of alpha-synuclein, IΚBα, and Rcan1 was similar in control and Lamp-2-deficient cells, and its degradation prevented by proteasome inhibitors. Both in control and Lamp-2-deficient cells, induction of CMA and macroautophagy by serum and aminoacid starvation of cells for 8 h produced a similar decrease in IΚBα and Rcan1 protein levels and was prevented by the addition of lysosome and autophagy inhibitors. In conclusion, the results presented here showed that Lamp-2 deficiency in human lymphoblastoid cells did not modify the steady-state levels or the degradation of several protein substrates reported as selective substrates of the CMA pathway.
This work was supported by grants from MINECO SAF-2012-3455, Comunidad de Madrid P2010_BMD2331, and CIBERNED to JGC.
Peer Reviewed
Alpha-synuclein, Chaperone-mediated autophagy, Danon disease, Autophagy, Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, LAMP-2, Rcan1, Ubiquitin proteasome, IkappaB
Alpha-synuclein, Chaperone-mediated autophagy, Danon disease, Autophagy, Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, LAMP-2, Rcan1, Ubiquitin proteasome, IkappaB
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