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  4. Dysregulation of gene expression in primary neuron models of Huntington's disease shows that polyglutamine-related effects on the striatal transcriptome may not be dependent on brain circuitry
 
research article

Dysregulation of gene expression in primary neuron models of Huntington's disease shows that polyglutamine-related effects on the striatal transcriptome may not be dependent on brain circuitry

Runne, Heike
•
Régulier, Etienne  
•
Kuhn, Alexandre
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2008
The Journal of neuroscience

Gene expression changes are a hallmark of the neuropathology of Huntington's disease (HD), but the exact molecular mechanisms of this effect remain uncertain. Here, we report that in vitro models of disease comprised of primary striatal neurons expressing N-terminal fragments of mutant huntingtin (via lentiviral gene delivery) faithfully reproduce the gene expression changes seen in human HD. Neither viral infection nor unrelated (enhanced green fluorescent protein) transgene expression had a major effect on resultant RNA profiles. Expression of a wild-type fragment of huntingtin [htt171-18Q] also caused only a small number of RNA changes. The disease-related signal in htt171-82Q versus htt171-18Q comparisons was far greater, resulting in the differential detection of 20% of all mRNA probe sets. Transcriptomic effects of mutated htt171 are time- and polyglutamine-length dependent and occur in parallel with other manifestations of polyglutamine toxicity over 4-8 weeks. Specific RNA changes in htt171-82Q-expressing striatal cells accurately recapitulated those observed in human HD caudate and included decreases in PENK (proenkephalin), RGS4 (regulator of G-protein signaling 4), dopamine D(1) receptor (DRD1), DRD2, CNR1 (cannabinoid CB(1) receptor), and DARPP-32 (dopamine- and cAMP-regulated phosphoprotein-32; also known as PPP1R1B) mRNAs. HD-related transcriptomic changes were also observed in primary neurons expressing a longer fragment of mutant huntingtin (htt853-82Q). The gene expression changes observed in cultured striatal neurons are not secondary to abnormalities of neuronal firing or glutamatergic, dopaminergic, or brain-derived neurotrophic factor signaling, thereby demonstrating that HD-induced dysregulation of the striatal transcriptome might be attributed to intrinsic effects of mutant huntingtin.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3044-08.2008
Web of Science ID

WOS:000259500700013

Author(s)
Runne, Heike
Régulier, Etienne  
Kuhn, Alexandre
Zala, Diana  
Gokce, Ozgun
Perrin, Valérie  
Sick, Beate
Aebischer, Patrick  
Déglon, Nicole  
Luthi-Carter, Ruth  
Date Issued

2008

Published in
The Journal of neuroscience
Volume

28

Issue

39

Start page

9723

End page

31

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LEN  
LNGF  
Available on Infoscience
November 24, 2009
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/44429
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