TitleStructural rationale to understand the effect of disease-associated mutations on Myotubularin.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2023
AuthorsBhattacharyya T, Ghosh A, Verma S, Raghu P, Sowdhamini R
JournalCurr Res Struct Biol
Volume5
Pagination100100
Date Published2023
ISSN2665-928X
Abstract

Myotubularin or MTM1 is a lipid phosphatase that regulates vesicular trafficking in the cell. The gene is mutated in a severe form of muscular disease, X-linked myotubular myopathy or XLMTM, affecting 1 in 50,000 newborn males worldwide. There have been several studies on the disease pathology of XLMTM, but the structural effects of missense mutations of MTM1 are underexplored due to the unavailability of a crystal structure. MTM1 consists of three domains-a lipid-binding N-terminal GRAM domain, the phosphatase domain and a coiled-coil domain which aids dimerisation of Myotubularin homologs. While most mutations reported to date map to the phosphatase domain of MTM1, the other two domains on the sequence are also frequently mutated in XLMTM. To understand the overall structural and functional effects of missense mutations on MTM1, we curated several missense mutations and performed and studies. Apart from significantly impaired binding to substrate, abrogation of phosphatase activity was observed for a few mutants. Possible long-range effects of mutations from non-catalytic domains on phosphatase activity were observed as well. Coiled-coil domain mutants have been characterised here for the first time in XLMTM literature.

DOI10.1016/j.crstbi.2023.100100
Alternate JournalCurr Res Struct Biol
PubMed ID37101954
PubMed Central IDPMC10123148