‘LARGE’ PROTEIN
CORRECTS DEFECT
IN SOME MD-AFFECTED CELLS
A protein known as “LARGE” may have the capacity to
restore normal structure and function to cells in several forms
of muscular dystrophy, say MDA-supported researchers who published
their findings in the July issue of the journal Nature Medicine.
MDA grantees Rita Barresi, Steven Moore and Kevin Campbell, all
at the University of Iowa in Iowa City, were on the team, which
also included researchers from Canada, Sweden and Japan.
The investigators found that LARGE, an enzyme that attaches sugar
molecules to proteins -- a glycosyltransferase -- can correct
the molecular defect in several muscular dystrophies in which
the attachment of sugars (glycosylation) to a protein in the cell
membrane is faulty.
The muscular dystrophies that result from these glycosylation
defects include several forms of congenital MD -- Fukuyama MD,
muscle-eye-brain disease, Walker-Warburg syndrome and type 1C
and 1D congenital MDs. In several of these, both muscle and brain
cells are affected.
Another disorder, the type 2I form of limb-girdle MD, is also
caused by this type of glycosylation defect.
In each case, an enzyme (a protein that allows chemical reactions
to take place) that’s responsible for attaching sugar molecules
to alpha-dystroglycan, a cell membrane protein, is missing or
abnormal, leading to less than adequate attachment of the sugars
and to serious consequences for the cell.
Most of the other muscular dystrophies, Campbell notes, are due
to defects in proteins that form parts of the cell’s physical
structure. It’s harder to replace or compensate for those,
he says.
“When you have enzymatic activity, you don’t have
to produce a lot of the protein; a little will probably do,”
Campbell noted.
The researchers studied mice lacking the LARGE protein because
of a genetic defect in the gene for LARGE and found that giving
them a working version of that gene via a viral delivery system
returned the biochemistry, structure and function of their muscle
fibers nearly to normal.
They then added the LARGE gene to cells from people with Fukuyama
MD, muscle-eye-brain disease and Walker-Warburg syndrome and found
that adequate numbers of sugar molecules were attached to the
alpha-dystroglycan protein.
Further study of some of the cells revealed that the laminin
protein, which must attach to the sugars on alpha-dystroglycan
and can’t “dock” without them, was properly
attached.
The authors call LARGE “an attractive target for the design
of therapies intended to manipulate alpha-dystroglycan glycosylation.”
They were pleasantly surprised that the protein worked in cells
affected by a variety of genetic defects, not just defects in
LARGE itself.
“We’re looking at testing different compounds in
cells to see if we can increase LARGE’s activity,”
Campbell said, noting that all patients except those with type
1D congenital MD already have the LARGE protein but apparently
not enough of it to compensate for their other enzymatic defect.
That’s good news, he says, because it means adding LARGE
is unlikely to generate an undesirable immune response.
“There are different things we’re pursuing,”
he added. One strategy is a gene delivery system for LARGE that
could potentially be used in people. “We’re making
AAV-LARGE [using the adeno-associated virus to deliver the LARGE
gene] to test in mice and then in patient cells.”