TY - JOUR
T1 - FIG4 regulates lysosome membrane homeostasis independent of phosphatase function
AU - Bharadwaj, Rajnish
AU - Cunningham, Kathleen M.
AU - Zhang, Ke
AU - Lloyd, Thomas E.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Bloomington Stock Center, Hellmut Kramer, Konrad Basler and Craig Montell for Drosophila lines and Patrick Dolph for Cathepsin and Rab7 antibodies. We thank Guy Lenk, Miriam Meisler and Mark Wu for helpful discussion and comments on this manuscript. We thank Megan Fauci, Sarah Collins, James Machamer and Brian Woolums for technical assistance. The MPI Imaging Core is funded by an NINDS Core Center Grant (P30 NS050274: "JHU Center for Neuroscience Research"). This work was supported by an NIH/NINDS R01NS082563 to T.E.L. and an ALSA fellowship to K.Z.
Funding Information:
The MPI Imaging Core is funded by an NINDS Core Center Grant (P30 NS050274: “JHU Center for Neuroscience Research”). This work was supported by an NIH/NINDS R01NS082563 to T.E.L. and an ALSA fellowship to K.Z.
Publisher Copyright:
© The Author 2015. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.
PY - 2016
Y1 - 2016
N2 - FIG4 is a phosphoinositide phosphatase that is mutated in several diseases including Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease 4J (CMT4J) and Yunis-Varon syndrome (YVS). To investigate the mechanism of disease pathogenesis, we generated Drosophila models of FIG4-related diseases. Fig4 null mutant animals are viable but exhibit marked enlargement of the lysosomal compartment in muscle cells and neurons, accompanied by an age-related decline in flight ability. Transgenic animals expressing Drosophila Fig4 missense mutations corresponding to human pathogenic mutations can partially rescue lysosomal expansion phenotypes, consistent with these mutations causing decreased FIG4 function. Interestingly, Fig4 mutations predicted to inactivate FIG4 phosphatase activity rescue lysosome expansion phenotypes, and mutations in the phosphoinositide (3) phosphate kinase Fab1 that performs the reverse enzymatic reaction also causes a lysosome expansion phenotype. Since FIG4 and FAB1 are present together in the same biochemical complex, these data are consistent with a model in which FIG4 serves a phosphataseindependent biosynthetic function that is essential for lysosomal membrane homeostasis. Lysosomal phenotypes are suppressed by genetic inhibition of Rab7 or the HOPS complex, demonstrating that FIG4 functions after endosome-to-lysosome fusion. Furthermore, disruption of the retromer complex, implicated in recycling from the lysosome to Golgi, does not lead to similar phenotypes as Fig4, suggesting that the lysosomal defects are not due to compromised retromer-mediated recycling of endolysosomal membranes. These data show that FIG4 plays a critical noncatalytic function in maintaining lysosomal membrane homeostasis, and that this function is disrupted by mutations that cause CMT4J and YVS.
AB - FIG4 is a phosphoinositide phosphatase that is mutated in several diseases including Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease 4J (CMT4J) and Yunis-Varon syndrome (YVS). To investigate the mechanism of disease pathogenesis, we generated Drosophila models of FIG4-related diseases. Fig4 null mutant animals are viable but exhibit marked enlargement of the lysosomal compartment in muscle cells and neurons, accompanied by an age-related decline in flight ability. Transgenic animals expressing Drosophila Fig4 missense mutations corresponding to human pathogenic mutations can partially rescue lysosomal expansion phenotypes, consistent with these mutations causing decreased FIG4 function. Interestingly, Fig4 mutations predicted to inactivate FIG4 phosphatase activity rescue lysosome expansion phenotypes, and mutations in the phosphoinositide (3) phosphate kinase Fab1 that performs the reverse enzymatic reaction also causes a lysosome expansion phenotype. Since FIG4 and FAB1 are present together in the same biochemical complex, these data are consistent with a model in which FIG4 serves a phosphataseindependent biosynthetic function that is essential for lysosomal membrane homeostasis. Lysosomal phenotypes are suppressed by genetic inhibition of Rab7 or the HOPS complex, demonstrating that FIG4 functions after endosome-to-lysosome fusion. Furthermore, disruption of the retromer complex, implicated in recycling from the lysosome to Golgi, does not lead to similar phenotypes as Fig4, suggesting that the lysosomal defects are not due to compromised retromer-mediated recycling of endolysosomal membranes. These data show that FIG4 plays a critical noncatalytic function in maintaining lysosomal membrane homeostasis, and that this function is disrupted by mutations that cause CMT4J and YVS.
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U2 - 10.1093/HMG/DDV505
DO - 10.1093/HMG/DDV505
M3 - Article
C2 - 26662798
AN - SCOPUS:85012837639
SN - 0964-6906
VL - 25
SP - 681
EP - 692
JO - Human molecular genetics
JF - Human molecular genetics
IS - 4
ER -