4.7 Article

Cleavage at the 586 Amino Acid Caspase-6 Site in Mutant huntingtin Influences Caspase-6 Activation In Vivo

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 30, Issue 45, Pages 15019-15029

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2071-10.2010

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Funding

  1. Cure Huntington Disease Initiative (TREAT-HD)
  2. Huntington's Disease Society of America [20R69538]
  3. Canadian Institute of Health [CGD-85375]
  4. Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research [RKG 00495(06-1)BM]
  5. Health Research Council of New Zealand [08/051]
  6. Neurological Foundation of New Zealand [0910-PG]
  7. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke/National Institutes of Health [R01 NS049501]
  8. Hereditary Disease Foundation

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Caspase cleavage of huntingtin (htt) and nuclear htt accumulation represent early neuropathological changes in brains of patients with Huntington's disease (HD). However, the relationship between caspase cleavage of htt and caspase activation patterns in the pathogenesis of HD remains poorly understood. The lack of a phenotype in YAC mice expressing caspase-6-resistant (C6R) mutant htt (mhtt) highlights proteolysis of htt at the 586 aa caspase-6 (casp6) site as a key mechanism in the pathology of HD. The goal of this study was to investigate how proteolysis of htt at residue 586 plays a role in the pathogenesis of HD and determine whether inhibiting casp6 cleavage of mhtt alters cell-death pathways in vivo. Here we demonstrate that activation of casp6, and not caspase-3, is observed before onset of motor abnormalities in human and murine HD brain. Active casp6 levels correlate directly with CAG size and inversely with age of onset. In contrast, in vivo expression of C6R mhtt attenuates caspase activation. Increased casp6 activity and apoptotic cell death is evident in primary striatal neurons expressing caspase-cleavable, but not C6R, mhtt after NMDA application. Pretreatment with a casp6 inhibitor rescues the apoptotic cell death observed in this paradigm. These data demonstrate that activation of casp6 is an early marker of disease in HD. Furthermore, these data provide a clear link between excitotoxic pathways and proteolysis and suggest that C6R mhtt protects against neurodegeneration by influencing the activation of neuronal cell-death and excitotoxic pathways operative in HD.

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