4.6 Article

Striatal Parvalbuminergic Neurons Are Lost in Huntington's Disease: Implications for Dystonia

Journal

MOVEMENT DISORDERS
Volume 28, Issue 12, Pages 1691-1699

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/mds.25624

Keywords

Huntington's disease; dystonia; striatum; parvalbuminergic interneurons

Funding

  1. Santa Lucia Foundation IRCSS at the European Center for Brain Research
  2. NIH [NS-28721]
  3. Hereditary Disease Foundation
  4. The Methodist Hospitals Endowed Professorship in Neuroscience
  5. Matthew Oswin Memorial Trust
  6. Health Research Council of New Zealand

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Although dystonia represents a major source of motor disability in Huntington's disease (HD), its pathophysiology remains unknown. Because recent animal studies indicate that loss of parvalbuminergic (PARV+) striatal interneurons can cause dystonia, we investigated if loss of PARV+ striatal interneurons occurs during human HD progression, and thus might contribute to dystonia in HD. We used immunolabeling to detect PARV+ interneurons in fixed sections, and corrected for disease-related striatal atrophy by expressing PARV+ interneuron counts in ratio to interneurons co-containing somatostatin and neuropeptide Y (whose numbers are unaffected in HD). At all symptomatic HD grades, PARV+ interneurons were reduced to less than 26% of normal abundance in rostral caudate. In putamen rostral to the level of globus pallidus, loss of PARV+ interneurons was more gradual, not dropping off to less than 20% of control until grade 2. Loss of PARV+ interneurons was even more gradual in motor putamen at globus pallidus levels, with no loss at grade 1, and steady grade-wise decline thereafter. A large decrease in striatal PARV+ interneurons, thus, occurs in HD with advancing disease grade, with regional variation in the loss per grade. Given the findings of animal studies and the grade-wise loss of PARV+ striatal interneurons in motor striatum in parallel with the grade-wise appearance and worsening of dystonia, our results raise the possibility that loss of PARV+ striatal interneurons is a contributor to dystonia in HD.

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