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  4. Haloperidol protects striatal neurons from dysfunction induced by mutated huntingtin in vivo
 
research article

Haloperidol protects striatal neurons from dysfunction induced by mutated huntingtin in vivo

Charvin, Delphine
•
Roze, Emmanuel
•
Perrin, Valerie
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2008
Neurobiology Of Disease

Huntington's disease (HD) results from an abnormal polyglutamine extension in the N-terminal region of the huntingtin protein. This mutation causes preferential degeneration of striatal projection neurons. We previously demonstrated, in vitro, that dopaminergic D2 receptor stimulation acted synergistically with mutated huntingtin (expHtt) to increase aggregate formation and striatal death. In the present work, we extend these observations to an in viva system based on lentiviral-mediated expression of expHtt in the rat striatum. The early and chronic treatment with the D2 antagonist haloperidol decanoate protects striatal neurons from expHtt-induced dysfunction, as analyzed by DARPP-32 and NeuN stainings. Haloperidol treatment also reduces aggregates formation, an effect that is maintained over time. These findings indicate that D2 receptors activation contributes to the deleterious effects of expHtt on striatal function and may represent an interesting early target to alter the subsequent course of neuropathology in HD. (c) 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.nbd.2007.07.028
Web of Science ID

WOS:000251814700003

Author(s)
Charvin, Delphine
Roze, Emmanuel
Perrin, Valerie
Deyts, Carole
Betuing, Sandrine
Pages, Christiane
Regulier, Etienne
Luthi-Carter, Ruth  
Brouillet, Emmanuel
Deglon, Nicole
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Date Issued

2008

Publisher

Elsevier

Published in
Neurobiology Of Disease
Volume

29

Issue

1

Start page

22

End page

29

Subjects

dopamine

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D2 receptor

•

lentiviral infection

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Huntington's disease

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polyQ huntingtin

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NeuN

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Darpp-32

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striatal dysfunction

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Disease Transgenic Mice

•

Basal Ganglia Volume

•

Mouse Model

•

Mutant Huntingtin

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Intranuclear Inclusions

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Expanded Huntingtin

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Glucose-Metabolism

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Motor Dysfunction

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Messenger-Rna

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Rat Striatum

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LNGF  
Available on Infoscience
November 30, 2010
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/61667
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