Link to bioRxiv paper:
http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2023.03.29.534583v1?rss=1
Authors: Montealegre, S., de Calbiac, H., Straube, M., Debruge, H., Chentout, L., Ciura, S., Imbard, A., Le Guillou, E., Marian, A., Goudin, N., Caccavelli, L., Fabrega, S., Hubas, A., van Endert, P., Dupont, N., Diana, J., Kabashi, E., de Lonlay, P.
Abstract:
Patients with pathogenic variants in the TANGO2 gene suffer from severe and recurrent rhabdomyolysis (RM) episodes precipitated by fasting. Since starvation promotes autophagy induction, we wondered whether TANGO2-related muscle symptoms result from autophagy insufficiency to meet cellular demands in stress conditions. Autophagy functioning was analyzed in vitro, in primary skeletal muscle cells from TANGO2 patients in basal and fasting conditions. In addition, wce developed a tango2 morphant zebrafish model to assess the effect of tango2 knockdown (KD) on locomotor function and autophagy efficiency in vivo. We report that TANGO2 mutations are associated with decreased LC3-II levels upon starvation in primary muscle cells, but not in fibroblasts. In zebrafish larvae, tango2 knockdown induces locomotor defects characterized by reduced evoked movements which are exacerbated by exposure to atorvastatin, a compound known to cause RM. Importantly, RM features of tango2 KD are also associated with autophagy defects in zebrafish. Calpeptin treatment, a known activator of autophagy, is sufficient to rescue the locomotor function and improves autophagy in zebrafish. LC3-II levels of primary muscle cells of TANGO2 patients are also ameliorated by calpeptin treatment. Overall, we demonstrate that TANGO2 plays an important role in autophagy, and that autophagy efficiency is critical to prevent RM, thus giving rise to new therapeutic perspectives in the prevention of these life-threatening episodes in the context of TANGO2 pathology.
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