Suppression of Somatic Expansion Delays the Onset of Pathophysiology in a Mouse Model of Huntington's Disease. Budworth, H; Harris, FR; Williams, P; Lee, do Y; Holt, A; Pahnke, J; Szczesny, B; Acevedo-Torres, K; Ayala-Peña, S; McMurray, CT PLoS genetics
11
e1005267
2015
Show Abstract
Huntington's Disease (HD) is caused by inheritance of a single disease-length allele harboring an expanded CAG repeat, which continues to expand in somatic tissues with age. The inherited disease allele expresses a toxic protein, and whether further somatic expansion adds to toxicity is unknown. We have created an HD mouse model that resolves the effects of the inherited and somatic expansions. We show here that suppressing somatic expansion substantially delays the onset of disease in littermates that inherit the same disease-length allele. Furthermore, a pharmacological inhibitor, XJB-5-131, inhibits the lengthening of the repeat tracks, and correlates with rescue of motor decline in these animals. The results provide evidence that pharmacological approaches to offset disease progression are possible. | 26247199
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Molecular cloning and characterization of the common marmoset huntingtin gene. Hirohiko Hohjoh,Hirofumi Akari,Yuko Fujiwara,Yoshiko Tamura,Hirohisa Hirai,Keiji Wada Gene
432
2009
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We report here for the first time the isolation and identification of the common marmoset (Callithrix jacchus) huntingtin (Htt) gene, whose ortholog in humans is known to be related to Huntington's disease (HD). A 9396 nucleotide complementary DNA (cDNA) carrying the putative full-length open reading frame of the marmoset Htt gene was identified, and highly conserved nucleotide and amino acid sequences among primates were observed. Based on this data and using tools evaluated for the detection of the marmoset Htt gene, we have demonstrated gene silencing against the expression of endogenous Htt gene in immortalized common marmoset mononuclear cells by means of RNA interference (RNAi). Taken together, the data presented here may assist us in realizing a non-human primate HD model with the common marmoset. | 19073238
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Huntingtin modulates transcription, occupies gene promoters in vivo, and binds directly to DNA in a polyglutamine-dependent manner. Benn, CL; Sun, T; Sadri-Vakili, G; McFarland, KN; DiRocco, DP; Yohrling, GJ; Clark, TW; Bouzou, B; Cha, JH The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience
28
10720-33
2008
Show Abstract
Transcriptional dysregulation is a central pathogenic mechanism in Huntington's disease, a fatal neurodegenerative disorder associated with polyglutamine (polyQ) expansion in the huntingtin (Htt) protein. In this study, we show that mutant Htt alters the normal expression of specific mRNA species at least partly by disrupting the binding activities of many transcription factors which govern the expression of the dysregulated mRNA species. Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) demonstrates Htt occupation of gene promoters in vivo in a polyQ-dependent manner, and furthermore, ChIP-on-chip and ChIP subcloning reveal that wild-type and mutant Htt exhibit differential genomic distributions. Exon 1 Htt binds DNA directly in the absence of other proteins and alters DNA conformation. PolyQ expansion increases Htt-DNA interactions, with binding to recognition elements of transcription factors whose function is altered in HD. Together, these findings suggest mutant Htt modulates gene expression through abnormal interactions with genomic DNA, altering DNA conformation and transcription factor binding. Full Text Article | 18923047
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Huntingtin is present in the nucleus, interacts with the transcriptional corepressor C-terminal binding protein, and represses transcription. Kegel, KB; Meloni, AR; Yi, Y; Kim, YJ; Doyle, E; Cuiffo, BG; Sapp, E; Wang, Y; Qin, ZH; Chen, JD; Nevins, JR; Aronin, N; DiFiglia, M The Journal of biological chemistry
277
7466-76
2002
Show Abstract
Huntingtin is a protein of unknown function that contains a polyglutamine tract, which is expanded in patients with Huntington's disease (HD). We investigated the localization and a potential function for huntingtin in the nucleus. In human fibroblasts from normal and HD patients, huntingtin localized diffusely in the nucleus and in subnuclear compartments identified as speckles, promyelocytic leukemia protein bodies, and nucleoli. Huntingtin-positive nuclear bodies redistributed after treatment with sodium butyrate. By Western blot, purified nuclei had low levels of full-length huntingtin compared with the cytoplasm but contained high levels of N- and C-terminal huntingtin fragments, which tightly bound the nuclear matrix. Full-length huntingtin co-immunoprecipitated with the transcriptional corepressor C-terminal binding protein, and polyglutamine expansion in huntingtin reduced this interaction. Full-length wild-type and mutant huntingtin repressed transcription when targeted to DNA. Truncated N-terminal mutant huntingtin repressed transcription, whereas the corresponding wild-type fragment did not repress transcription. We speculate that wild-type huntingtin may function in the nucleus in the assembly of nuclear matrix-bound protein complexes involved with transcriptional repression and RNA processing. Proteolysis of mutant huntingtin may alter nuclear functions by disrupting protein complexes and inappropriately repressing transcription in HD. | 11739372
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Neurons lacking huntingtin differentially colonize brain and survive in chimeric mice. A Reiner, N Del Mar, C A Meade, H Yang, I Dragatsis, S Zeitlin, D Goldowitz The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience
21
7608-19
2001
Show Abstract
To determine whether neurons lacking huntingtin can participate in development and survive in postnatal brain, we used two approaches in an effort to create mice consisting of wild-type cells and cells without huntingtin. In one approach, chimeras were created by aggregating the 4-8 cell embryos from matings of Hdh (+/-) mice with wild-type 4-8 cell embryos. No chimeric offspring that possessed homozygous Hdh (-/-) cells were obtained thereby, although statistical considerations suggest that such chimeras should have been created. By contrast, Hdh (-/-) ES cells injected into blastocysts yielded offspring that were born and in adulthood were found to have Hdh (-/-) neurons throughout brain. The Hdh (-/-) cells were, however, 5-10 times more common in hypothalamus, midbrain, and hindbrain than in telencephalon and thalamus. Chimeric animals tended to be smaller than wild-type littermates, and chimeric mice rich in Hdh (-/-) cells tended to show motor abnormalities. Nonetheless, no brain malformations or pathologies were evident. The apparent failure of aggregation chimeras possessing Hdh (-/-) cells to survive to birth is likely attributable to the previously demonstrated critical role of huntingtin in extraembryonic membranes. That Hdh (-/-) cells in chimeric mice created by blastocyst injection are under-represented in adult telencephalon and thalamus implies a role for huntingtin in the development of these regions, whereas the neurological dysfunction in brains enriched in Hdh (-/-) cells suggests a role for huntingtin in adult brain. Nonetheless, the lengthy survival of Hdh (-/-) cells in adult chimeric mice indicates that individual neurons in many brain regions do not require huntingtin to participate in normal brain development and to survive. | 11567051
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Cellular localization of huntingtin in striatal and cortical neurons in rats: lack of correlation with neuronal vulnerability in Huntington's disease. F R Fusco, Q Chen, W J Lamoreaux, G Figueredo-Cardenas, Y Jiao, J A Coffman, D J Surmeier, M G Honig, L R Carlock, A Reiner The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience
19
1189-202
1999
Show Abstract
Immunohistochemistry and single-cell RT-PCR were used to characterize the localization of huntingtin and/or its mRNA in the major types of striatal neurons and in corticostriatal projection neurons in rats. Single-label immunohistochemical studies revealed that striatum contains scattered large neurons rich in huntingtin and more numerous medium-sized neurons moderate in huntingtin. Double-label immunohistochemical studies showed that the large huntingtin-rich striatal neurons include nearly all cholinergic interneurons and some parvalbuminergic interneurons. Somatostatinergic striatal interneurons, which are medium in size, rarely contained huntingtin. Calbindin immunolabeling showed that the vast majority of the medium-sized striatal neurons that contain huntingtin are projection neurons, but only approximately 65% of calbindin-labeled projection neurons (localized to the matrix compartment of striatum) were labeled for huntingtin. Calbindin-containing projection neurons of the matrix compartment and calbindin-negative projection neurons of the striatal patch compartment contained huntingtin with comparable frequency. Single-cell RT-PCR confirmed that striatal cholinergic interneurons contain huntingtin, but only approximately 65% of projection neurons contained detectable huntingtin message. The finding that huntingtin is not consistently found in striatal projection neurons [which die in Huntington's disease (HD)] but is abundant in striatal cholinergic interneurons (which survive in Huntington's disease) suggests that the mutation in huntingtin that causes HD may not directly kill neurons. In contrast to the heterogeneous expression of huntingtin in the different striatal neuron types, we found all corticostriatal neurons to be rich in huntingtin protein and mRNA. One possibility raised by our findings is that the HD mutation may render corticostriatal neurons destructive rather than render striatal neurons vulnerable. | 9952397
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Polyglutamine expansion as a pathological epitope in Huntington's disease and four dominant cerebellar ataxias. Trottier, Y, et al. Nature, 378: 403-6 (1995)
1995
Show Abstract
A polyglutamine expansion (encoded by a CAG repeat) in specific proteins causes neurodegeneration in Huntington's disease (HD) and four other disorders, by an unknown mechanism thought to involve gain of function or toxicity of the mutated protein. The pathological threshold is 37-40 glutamines in three of these diseases, whereas the corresponding normal proteins contain polymorphic repeats of up to about 35 glutamines. The age of onset of clinical manifestations is inversely correlated to the length of the polyglutamine expansion. Here we report the characterization of a monoclonal antibody that selectively recognizes polyglutamine expansion in the proteins implicated in HD and in spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA) 1 and 3. The intensity of signal depends on the length of the polyglutamine expansion, and the antibody also detects specific pathological proteins expected to contain such expansion, in SCA2 and in autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxia with retinal degeneration, whose genes have not yet been identified. | 7477379
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Cellular localization of the Huntington's disease protein and discrimination of the normal and mutated form. Trottier, Y, et al. Nat. Genet., 10: 104-10 (1995)
1995
Show Abstract
Huntington's disease (HD) results from the expansion of a polyglutamine encoding CAG repeat in a gene of unknown function. The wide expression of this transcript does not correlate with the pattern of neuropathology in HD. To study the HD gene product (huntingtin), we have developed monoclonal antibodies raised against four different regions of the protein. On western blots, these monoclonals detect the approximately 350 kD huntingtin protein in various human cell lines and in neural and non-neural rodent tissues. In cell lines from HD patients, a doublet protein is detected corresponding to the mutated and normal huntingtin. Immunohistochemical studies in the human brain using two of these antibodies detects the huntingtin in perikarya of some neurons, neuropiles, varicosities and as punctate staining likely to be nerve endings. | 7647777
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