4.5 Article

Comparative study of naturally occurring huntingtin fragments in Drosophila points to exon 1 as the most pathogenic species in Huntington's disease

Journal

HUMAN MOLECULAR GENETICS
Volume 24, Issue 4, Pages 913-925

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddu504

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Optical Biology Core facility
  2. Cancer Center Support grant of the University of California, Irvine (CC) [CA62203]
  3. CHDI foundation [HQ-44670]
  4. National Institute of Health [NS-45283, NS064173]

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Although Huntington's disease is caused by the expansion of a CAG triplet repeat within the context of the 3144-amino acid huntingtin protein (HTT), studies reveal that N-terminal fragments of HTT containing the expanded PolyQ region can be produced by proteolytic processing and/or aberrant splicing. N-terminal HTT fragments are also prevalent in postmortem tissue, and expression of some of these fragments in model organisms can cause pathology. This has led to the hypothesis that N-terminal peptides may be critical modulators of disease pathology, raising the possibility that targeting aberrant splicing or proteolytic processingmay present attractive therapeutic targets. However, many factors can contribute to pathology, including genetic background and differential expression of transgenes, in addition to intrinsic differences between fragments and their cellular effects. WehaveusedDrosophilaasamodelsystemtodeterminetherelativetoxicitiesofdifferentnaturallyoccurringhun-tingtin fragments in a system in which genetic background, transgene expression levels and post-translational proteolytic processing can be controlled. These studies reveal that among the naturally occurring N-terminal HTT peptides, the exon 1 peptide is exceptionally pathogenic and exhibits unique structural and biophysical behaviors that do not appear to be incremental changes compared with other fragments. If this proves correct, efforts to specifically reduce the levels of exon 1 peptides or to target toxicity-influencing post-translational modifications that occur with the exon 1 context are likely to have the greatest impact on pathology.

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