4.7 Article

Golgi Complex form and Function: A Potential Hub Role Also in Skeletal Muscle Pathologies?

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms232314989

Keywords

muscular dystrophy; Limb girdle muscular dystrophy; dystrophin associated protein complex; early secretory pathway; glycosylation; Golgi Complex

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A growing number of disorders are caused by mutations in the vesicular transport machinery, specifically in the Golgi Complex (GC). The GC is crucial for the organization and function of the early secretory pathway, and alterations in its form and function contribute to several disorders, including muscular dystrophies.
A growing number of disorders has been associated with mutations in the components of the vesicular transport machinery. The early secretory pathway consists of Endoplasmic Reticulum, numerous vesicles, and the Golgi Complex (GC), which work together to modify and package proteins to deliver them to their destination. The GC is a hub organelle, crucial for organization of the other secretory pathway components. As a consequence, GC's form and function are key players in the pathogenesis of several disorders. Skeletal muscle (SKM) damage can be caused by defective protein modifications and traffic, as observed in some Limb girdle muscular dystrophies. Interestingly, in turn, muscle damage in Duchenne dystrophic SKM cells also includes the alteration of GC morphology. Based on the correlation between GC's form and function described in non-muscle diseases, we suggest a key role for this hub organelle also in the onset and progression of some SKM disorders. An altered GC could affect the secretory pathway via primary (e.g., mutation of a glycosylation enzyme), or secondary mechanisms (e.g., GC mis-localization in Duchenne muscles), which converge in SKM cell failure. This evidence induces considering the secretory pathway as a potential therapeutic target in the treatment of muscular dystrophies.

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