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Delayed emergence of subdiffraction-sized mutant huntingtin fibrils following inclusion body formation

Journal

QUARTERLY REVIEWS OF BIOPHYSICS
Volume 49, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0033583515000219

Keywords

huntingtin; Huntington's Disease; protein aggregation; amyloid; super-resolution; single-molecule imaging

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Funding

  1. U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) through the National Institute of General Medical Sciences [R01GM086196]
  2. National Eye Institute [PN2EY016525]
  3. Marie Curie International Outgoing Fellowship Program [303096 FOLDEG]

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Aberrant aggregation of improperly folded proteins is the hallmark of several human neurodegenerative disorders, including Huntington's Disease (HD) with autosomal-dominant inheritance. In HD, expansion of the CAG-repeat-encoded polyglutamine (polyQ) stretch beyond similar to 40 glutamines in huntingtin (Htt) and its N-terminal fragments leads to the formation of large (up to several mu m) globular neuronal inclusion bodies (IBs) over time. We report direct observations of aggregating Htt exon 1 in living and fixed cells at enhanced spatial resolution by stimulated emission depletion (STED) microscopy and single-molecule super-resolution optical imaging. Fibrils of Htt exon 1 arise abundantly across the cytosolic compartment and also in neuritic processes only after nucleation and aggregation into a fairly advanced stage of growth of the prominent IB have taken place. Structural characterizations of fibrils by STED show a distinct length cutoff at similar to 1.5 mu m and reveal subsequent coalescence (bundling/piling). Cytosolic fibrils are observed even at late stages in the process, side-by-side with the mature IB. Htt sequestration into the IB, which in neurons has been argued to be a cell-protective phenomenon, thus appears to saturate and over-power the cellular degradation systems and leaves cells vulnerable to further aggregation producing much smaller, potentially toxic, conformational protein species of which the fibrils may be comprised. We further found that exogenous delivery of the apical domain of the chaperonin subunit CCT1 to the cells via the cell medium reduced the aggregation propensity of mutant Htt exon 1 in general, and strongly reduced the occurrence of such late-stage fibrils in particular.

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