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  4. Correlative light and electron microscopy suggests that mutant huntingtin dysregulates the endolysosomal pathway in presymptomatic Huntington's disease
 
research article

Correlative light and electron microscopy suggests that mutant huntingtin dysregulates the endolysosomal pathway in presymptomatic Huntington's disease

Zhou, Ya
•
Peskett, Thomas R.
•
Landles, Christian
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April 14, 2021
Acta Neuropathologica Communications

Huntington's disease (HD) is a late onset, inherited neurodegenerative disorder for which early pathogenic events remain poorly understood. Here we show that mutant exon 1 HTT proteins are recruited to a subset of cytoplasmic aggregates in the cell bodies of neurons in brain sections from presymptomatic HD, but not wild-type, mice. This occurred in a disease stage and polyglutamine-length dependent manner. We successfully adapted a high-resolution correlative light and electron microscopy methodology, originally developed for mammalian and yeast cells, to allow us to correlate light microscopy and electron microscopy images on the same brain section within an accuracy of 100 nm. Using this approach, we identified these recruitment sites as single membrane bound, vesicle-rich endolysosomal organelles, specifically as (1) multivesicular bodies (MVBs), or amphisomes and (2) autolysosomes or residual bodies. The organelles were often found in close-proximity to phagophore-like structures. Immunogold labeling localized mutant HTT to non-fibrillar, electron lucent structures within the lumen of these organelles. In presymptomatic HD, the recruitment organelles were predominantly MVBs/amphisomes, whereas in late-stage HD, there were more autolysosomes or residual bodies. Electron tomograms indicated the fusion of small vesicles with the vacuole within the lumen, suggesting that MVBs develop into residual bodies. We found that markers of MVB-related exocytosis were depleted in presymptomatic mice and throughout the disease course. This suggests that endolysosomal homeostasis has moved away from exocytosis toward lysosome fusion and degradation, in response to the need to clear the chronically aggregating mutant HTT protein, and that this occurs at an early stage in HD pathogenesis.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1186/s40478-021-01172-z
Web of Science ID

WOS:000640499600004

Author(s)
Zhou, Ya
Peskett, Thomas R.
Landles, Christian
Warner, John B.
Sathasivam, Kirupa
Smith, Edward J.
Chen, Shu
Wetzel, Ronald
Lashuel, Hilal A.  
Bates, Gillian P.
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Date Issued

2021-04-14

Publisher

BMC

Published in
Acta Neuropathologica Communications
Volume

9

Issue

1

Start page

70

Subjects

Neurosciences

•

Neurosciences & Neurology

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huntington's disease

•

correlative light and electron microscopy

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electron tomography

•

huntingtin aggregation

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polyglutamine

•

endolysosomal system

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multivesicular body

•

amphisome

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autolysosome

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exocytosis

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neuronal intranuclear inclusions

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multivesicular bodies

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body formation

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repeat length

•

cell-death

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wild-type

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hd gene

•

exon-1

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protein

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LMNN  
Available on Infoscience
May 22, 2021
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/178302
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