4.7 Article

Quantitative Relationships between Huntingtin Levels, Polyglutamine Length, Inclusion Body Formation, and Neuronal Death Provide Novel Insight into Huntington's Disease Molecular Pathogenesis

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 30, Issue 31, Pages 10541-10550

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0146-10.2010

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH)-National Institute of General Medical Sciences University of California, San Francisco (UCSF)
  2. Medical Scientist Training Program
  3. UCSF Hilblom Center for the Biology of Aging
  4. NIH [AG18440, AG11385, AG022074, C06 RR018928]
  5. Taube-Koret Center for Huntington's Disease Research
  6. NIH-National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke [2R01 NS039074, 2R01 NS045091]
  7. NIH-National Institute on Aging [2P01 AG022074]
  8. J. David Gladstone Institutes

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An expanded polyglutamine (polyQ) stretch in the protein huntingtin (htt) induces self-aggregation into inclusion bodies (IBs) and causes Huntington's disease (HD). Defining precise relationships between early observable variables and neuronal death at the molecular and cellular levels should improve our understanding of HD pathogenesis. Here, we used an automated microscope that tracks thousands of neurons individually over their entire lifetime to quantify interconnected relationships between early variables, such as htt levels, polyQ length, and IB formation, and neuronal death in a primary striatal model of HD. The resulting model revealed that mutant htt increases the risk of death by tonically interfering with homeostatic coping mechanisms rather than producing accumulated damage to the neuron, htt toxicity is saturable, the rate-limiting steps for inclusion body formation and death can be traced to different conformational changes in monomeric htt, and IB formation reduces the impact of the starting levels of htt of a neuron on its risk of death. Finally, the model that emerges from our quantitative measurements places critical limits on the potential mechanisms by which mutant htt might induce neurodegeneration, which should help direct future research.

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