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Post-translational modification by the lipid palmitate is crucial for the correct targeting and function of many proteins. Here we show that huntingtin (htt) is normally palmitoylated at cysteine 214, which is essential for its trafficking and function. The palmitoylation and distribution of htt are regulated by the palmitoyl transferase huntingtin interacting protein 14 (HIP14). Expansion of the polyglutamine tract of htt, which causes Huntington disease, results in reduced interaction between mutant htt and HIP14 and consequently in a marked reduction in palmitoylation. Mutation of the palmitoylation site of htt, making it palmitoylation resistant, accelerates inclusion formation and increases neuronal toxicity. Downregulation of HIP14 in mouse neurons expressing wild-type and mutant htt increases inclusion formation, whereas overexpression of HIP14 substantially reduces inclusions. These results suggest that the expansion of the polyglutamine tract in htt results in decreased palmitoylation, which contributes to the formation of inclusion bodies and enhanced neuronal toxicity.  相似文献   

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Huntington disease (HD) is an adult-onset neurodegenerative disease caused by a toxic gain of function in the huntingtin (htt) protein. The contribution of wild-type htt function to the pathogenesis of HD is currently uncertain. To assess the role of wild-type htt in HD, we generated YAC128 mice that do not express wild-type htt (YAC128-/-) but express the same amount of mutant htt as normal YAC128 mice (YAC128+/+). YAC128-/- mice perform worse than YAC128+/+ mice in the rotarod test of motor coordination (P = 0.001) and are hypoactive compared with YAC128+/+ mice at 2 months (P = 0.003). Striatal neuropathology was not clearly worse in YAC128-/- mice compared with YAC128+/+ mice. There was no significant effect of decreased wild-type htt on striatal volume, neuronal counts or DARPP-32 expression but a modest worsening of striatal neuronal atrophy was evident (6%, P = 0.03). The testis of YAC128+/+ mice showed atrophy and degeneration, which was markedly worsened in the absence of wild-type htt (P = 0.001). YAC128+/+ mice also showed a male specific deficit in survival compared with WT mice which was exacerbated by the loss of wild-type htt (12-month-male survival, P < 0.001). Overall, we demonstrate that the loss of wild-type htt influences motor dysfunction, hyperkinesia, testicular degeneration and impaired lifespan in YAC128 mice. The mild effect of wild-type htt on striatal phenotypes in YAC128 mice suggests that the characteristic striatal neuropathology in HD is caused primarily by the toxicity of mutant htt and that replacement of wild-type htt will not be an adequate treatment for HD.  相似文献   

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Huntington disease (HD) results from polyglutamine expansion in the huntingtin protein (htt). Despite the widespread tissue expression pattern of htt, neuronal loss is highly selective to medium spiny neurons of the striatum. Huntingtin is phosphorylated on serine-421 (S421) by the pro-survival signaling protein kinase Akt (PKB) and this has been previously shown to be protective against the toxicity of polyglutamine-expanded htt in cell culture. Using an antibody specific for htt phosphorylated on S421, we now demonstrate that htt phosphorylation is present at significant levels under normal physiological conditions in human and mouse brain. Furthermore, htt phosphorylation shows a regional distribution with the highest levels in the cerebellum, less in the cortex, and least in the striatum. In cell cultures and in YAC transgenic mice, the endogenous phosphorylation of polyglutamine-expanded htt is significantly reduced relative to wild-type htt. The presence and pattern of significant htt phosphorylation in the brain indicates that this dynamic post-translational modification is important for the regulation of htt and may contribute to the selective neurodegeneration seen in HD.  相似文献   

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Autophagy regulates the processing of amino terminal huntingtin fragments   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
The N-terminus of mutant huntingtin (htt) has a polyglutamine expansion and forms neuronal aggregates in the brain of Huntington's disease (HD) patients. Htt expression in vitro activates autophagy, but it is unclear whether autophagic/lysosomal pathways process htt, especially N-terminal htt fragments. We explored the role of autophagy in htt processing in three cell lines, clonal striatal cells, PC12 cells and rodent embryonic cells lacking cathepsin D. Blocking autophagy raised levels of exogenously expressed htt1-287 or 1-969, reduced cell viability and increased the number of cells bearing mutant htt aggregates. Stimulating autophagy promoted htt degradation, including breakdown of caspase cleaved N-terminal htt fragments. Htt expression increased levels of the lysosomal enzyme cathepsin D by an autophagy-dependent pathway. Cells without cathepsin D accumulated more N-terminal htt fragments and cells with cathepsin D were more efficient in degrading wt htt than mutant htt in vitro. These results suggest that autophagy plays a critical role in the degradation of N-terminal htt. Altered processing of mutant htt by autophagy and cathepsin D may contribute to HD pathogenesis.  相似文献   

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Huntington's disease (HD) is caused by a polyglutamine (polyQ)expansion in the huntingtin (htt) protein. While aggregationis a pathological hallmark of HD and related polyQ expansiondiseases, the role of aggregates has been disputed. Here wereport that p21-activated kinase 1 (Pak1) binds to htt in vivoand in vitro. Pak1 colocalized with mutant htt (muhtt) aggregatesin cell models and in human HD brains. Pak1 overexpression enhancedthe aggregation of muhtt. Furthermore, we observed SDS-solublewild-type htt (wthtt)–wthtt, wthtt–muhtt and muhtt–muhttinteractions, which were enhanced by the presence of Pak1. Weshow that Pak1 overexpression enhanced htt toxicity in cellmodels and neurons in parallel with its ability to promote aggregation,while Pak1 knockdown suppressed both aggregation and toxicity.Overexpression of either kinase-dead or wild-type Pak enhancedboth aggregation and toxicity. Our data reveal a novel mechanismregulating muhtt oligomerization and toxicity and suggest thatpathology may be at least partly dependent on soluble muhtt–muhttinteractions.  相似文献   

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Recent studies have implicated an N-terminal caspase-6 cleavage product of mutant huntingtin (htt) as an important mediator of toxicity in Huntington's disease (HD). To directly assess the consequences of such fragments on neurologic function, we produced transgenic mice that express a caspase-6 length N-terminal fragment of mutant htt (N586) with both normal (23Q) and disease (82Q) length glutamine repeats. In contrast to mice expressing N586-23Q, mice expressing N586-82Q accumulate large cytoplasmic inclusion bodies that can be visualized with antibodies to epitopes throughout the N586 protein. However, biochemical analyses of aggregated mutant huntingtin in these mice demonstrated that the inclusion bodies are composed largely of a much smaller htt fragment (terminating before residue 115), with lesser amounts of full-length N586-82Q fragments. Mice expressing the N586-82Q fragment show symptoms typical of previously generated mice expressing mutant huntingtin fragments, including failure to maintain weight, small brain weight and reductions in specific mRNAs in the striatum. Uniquely, these N586-82Q mice develop a progressive movement disorder that includes dramatic deficits in motor performance on the rotarod and ataxia. Our findings suggest that caspase-6-derived fragments of mutant htt are capable of inducing novel HD-related phenotypes, but these fragments are not terminal cleavage products as they are subject to further proteolysis. In this scenario, mutant htt fragments derived from caspase 6, or possibly other proteases, could mediate HD pathogenesis via a 'hit and run' type of mechanism in which caspase-6, or other larger N-terminal fragments, mediate a neurotoxic process before being cleaved to a smaller fragment that accumulates pathologically.  相似文献   

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Spinocerebellar ataxia type 6 (SCA6) is a neurodegenerative disease caused by small CAG repeat expansion in the alpha1A calcium channel gene. We found that the human alpha1A calcium channel protein expressed in human embryonic kidney 293T cells produces a 75 kDa C-terminal fragment. This fragment is more toxic to cells than the full-length alpha1A calcium channel, regardless of polyglutamine tract length. In cells stably transfected with plasmids of full-length alpha1A calcium channel cDNAs, the C-terminal fragment protein is present in the mutant transformant but not in the wild-type one, indicative that this C-terminal fragment with the expanded polyglutamine tract is more resistant to proteolysis than that with the normal sized polyglutamine tract. We speculate that the toxic C-terminal fragment, in which resistance to proteolysis is rendered by the expanded polyglutamine, has a key role in the pathological mechanism of SCA6.  相似文献   

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Huntington disease (HD) is an adult onset neurodegenerative disorder that predominantly affects the striatum and cortex despite ubiquitous expression of mutant huntingtin (htt). Here we demonstrate that this pattern of selective degeneration is present in the YAC128 mouse model of HD. At 12 months, YAC128 mice show significant atrophy in the striatum, globus pallidus and cortex with relative sparing of the hippocampus and cerebellum (striatum: -10.4%, P<0.001; globus pallidus: -10.8%, P=0.04; cortex: -8.6%, P=0.001; hippocampus: +0.3%, P=0.9; cerebellum: +2.9%, P=0.6). Similarly, neuronal loss at this age is present in the striatum (-9.1%, P<0.001) and cortex of YAC128 mice (-8.3%, P=0.02) but is not detected in the hippocampus (+1.5%, P=0.72). Mutant htt expression levels are similar throughout the brain and fail to explain the selective neuronal degeneration. In contrast, nuclear detection of mutant htt occurs earliest and to the greatest extent in the striatum-the region most affected in HD. The appearance of EM48-reactive mutant htt in the nucleus in the striatum at 2 months coincides with the onset of behavioral abnormalities in YAC128 mice. In contrast to YAC128 mice, the R6/1 mouse model of HD, which expresses exon 1 of mutant htt, exhibits non-selective, widespread atrophy along with non-selective nuclear detection of mutant htt at 10 months of age. Our findings suggest that selective nuclear localization of mutant htt may contribute to the selective degeneration in HD and that appropriately regulated expression of full-length mutant htt in YAC128 mice results in a pattern of degeneration remarkably similar to human HD.  相似文献   

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Huntington's disease (HD) is a fatal neurodegenerative disease characterized pathologically by aggregates composed of N-terminal fragments of the mutant form of the protein huntingtin (htt). The role of these N-terminal fragments in disease pathogenesis has been questioned based in part on studies in transgenic mice. In one important example, mice that express an N-terminal fragment of mutant htt terminating at the C-terminus of exon 2 (termed the Shortstop mouse) were reported to develop robust inclusion pathology without developing phenotypic abnormalities seen in the R6/2 or N171-82Q models of HD, which are also based on expression of mutant N-terminal htt fragments. To further explore the capacity of mutant exon-2 htt fragments to produce neurologic abnormalities (N-terminal 118 amino acids; N118), we generated transgenic mice expressing cDNA that encodes htt N118-82Q with the mouse prion promoter vector. In mice generated in this manner, we demonstrate robust inclusion pathology accompanied by early death and failure to gain weight. These phenotypes are the most robust abnormalities identified in the R6/2 and N171-82Q models. We conclude that the lack of an overt phenotype in the initial Shortstop mice cannot be completely explained by the properties of mutant htt N118 fragments.  相似文献   

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Huntington's disease (HD) is an autosomal dominant inheritable neurodegenerative disorder currently without effective treatment. It is caused by an expanded polyglutamine (poly Q) tract in the corresponding protein, huntingtin (htt), and therefore suppressing the huntingtin expression in brain neurons is expected to delay the onset and mitigate the severity of the disease. Here, we have used small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) directed against the huntingtin gene to repress the transgenic mutant huntingtin expression in an HD mouse model, R6/2. Results showed that intraventricular injection of siRNAs at an early postnatal period inhibited transgenic huntingtin expression in brain neurons and induced a decrease in the numbers and sizes of intranuclear inclusions in striatal neurons. Treatments using this siRNA significantly prolonged model mice longevity, improved motor function and slowed down the loss of body weight. This work suggests that siRNA-based therapy is promising as a future treatment for HD.  相似文献   

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Huntington disease (HD) is caused by the expansion of polyglutamine (polyQ) repeats in the amino-terminal of hungtintin (htt). PolyQ-expanded htt forms intracellular ubiquitinated aggregates in neurons and causes neuronal cell death. Here, utilizing a HD cellular model, we report that Tollip, an ubiquitin binding protein that participates in intracellular transport via endosomes, co-localizes with and stimulates aggregation of polyQ-expanded amino-terminal htt. Furthermore, we demonstrate that Tollip protects cells against the toxicity of polyQ-expanded htt. We propose that association of Tollip with polyubiquitin accelerates aggregation of toxic htt species into inclusions and thus provides a cell protective role by sequestration.  相似文献   

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Extensive striatal neuronal loss occurs in Huntington's disease (HD), which is caused by an expanded polyglutamine tract in huntingtin (htt). Evidence suggests that mutant htt directly or indirectly compromises mitochondrial function, contributing to the neuronal loss. To determine the role of compromised mitochondrial function in the neuronal cell death in HD, immortalized striatal cells established from Hdh(Q7) (wild-type) and Hdh(Q111) (mutant) mouse knock-in embryos were treated with 3-nitropropionic acid (3-NP), a mitochondrial complex II toxin. 3-NP treatment caused significantly greater cell death in mutant striatal cells compared with wild-type cells. In contrast, the extent of cell death induced by rotenone, a complex I inhibitor, was similar in both cell lines. Although evidence of apoptosis was present in 3-NP-treated wild-type striatal cells, it was absent in 3-NP-treated mutant cells. 3-NP treatment caused a greater loss of mitochondrial membrane potential (deltapsim) in mutant striatal cells compared with wild-type cells. Cyclosporine A, an inhibitor of mitochondrial permeability transition pore (PTP), and ruthenium red, an inhibitor of the mitochondrial calcium uniporter, both rescued mutant striatal cells from 3-NP-induced cell death and prevented the loss of deltapsim. These data show that mutant htt specifically increases cell vulnerability to mitochondrial complex II inhibition and further switched the type of cell death induced by complex II inhibition from apoptosis to a non-apoptotic form, caused by mitochondrial membrane depolarization, probably initiated by mitochondrial calcium overload and subsequent PTP opening. These findings suggest that impaired mitochondrial complex II function in HD may contribute to non-apoptotic neuronal cell death.  相似文献   

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Huntington's disease (HD) results from the expansion of a glutamine repeat near the N-terminus of huntingtin (htt). At post-mortem, neurons in the central nervous system of patients have been found to accumulate N-terminal fragments of mutant htt in nuclear and cytoplasmic inclusions. This pathology has been reproduced in transgenic mice expressing the first 171 amino acids of htt with 82 glutamines along with losses of motoric function, hypoactivity and abbreviated life-span. The relative contributions of nuclear versus cytoplasmic mutant htt to the pathogenesis of disease have not been clarified. To examine whether pathogenic processes in the nucleus disproportionately contribute to disease features in vivo, we fused a nuclear localization signal (NLS) derived from atrophin-1 to the N-terminus of an N171-82Q construct. Two lines of mice (lines 8A and 61) that were identified expressed NLS-N171-82Q at comparable levels and developed phenotypes identical to our previously described HD-N171-82Q mice. Western blot and immunohistochemical analyses revealed that NLS-N171-82Q fragments accumulate in nuclear, but not cytoplasmic, compartments. These data suggest that disruption of nuclear processes may account for many of the disease phenotypes displayed in the mouse models generated by expressing mutant N-terminal fragments of htt.  相似文献   

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Expansion of a polyglutamine repeat in huntingtin causes Huntington's disease (HD). Although full-length huntingtin is predominantly distributed in the cytoplasm, N-terminal fragments of huntingtin with expanded polyglutamine tracts are able to accumulate in the nucleus and kill neurons through apoptotic pathways. Transgenic mice expressing N-terminal mutant huntingtin show intranuclear huntingtin accumulation and develop progressive neurological symptoms. Inhibiting caspase-1 can prolong the survival of these HD mice. How intranuclear huntingtin is associated with caspase activation and apoptosis is unclear. Here we report that intranuclear huntingtin induces the activation of caspase-3 and the release of cytochrome c from mitochondria in cultured cells. As a result, cells expressing intranuclear huntingtin undergo apoptosis. We show that intranuclear huntingtin increases the expression of caspase-1, which may in turn activate caspase-3 and trigger apoptosis. We propose that the increased level of caspase-1 induced by intranuclear huntingtin contributes to HD-associated cell death.  相似文献   

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