Abstract
Striatal cell death in Huntington's Disease (HD) may involve mitochondrial defects, NMDA-mediated excitotoxicity, and activation of death effector proteases such as caspases and calpain. However, the precise contribution of mitochondrial defects in the activation of these proteases in HD is unknown. Here, we addressed this question by studying the mechanism of striatal cell death in rat models of HD using the mitochondrial complex II inhibitor 3-nitropropionic acid (3-NP). The neurotoxin was either given by intraperitoneal injections (acute model) or over 5 d by constant systemic infusion using osmotic pumps (chronic model) to produce either transient or sustained mitochondrial deficits. Caspase-9 activation preceded neurodegeneration in both cases. However, caspase-8 and caspase-3 were activated in the acute model, but not in the chronic model, showing that 3-NP does not require activation of these caspases to produce striatal degeneration. In contrast, activation of calpain was specifically detected in the striatum in both models and this was associated with a calpain-dependent cleavage of huntingtin. Finally, in the chronic model, which mimics a steady blockade of complex II activity reminiscent of HD, selective calpain inhibition prevented the abnormal calpain-dependent processing of huntingtin, reduced the size of the striatal lesions, and almost completely abolished the 3-NP-induced DNA fragmentation in striatal cells. The present results demonstrate that calpain is a predominant effector of striatal cell death associated with mitochondrial defects in vivo. This suggests that calpain may play an important role in HD pathogenesis and could be a potential therapeutic target to slow disease progression.
Highlights
Huntington’s disease (HD) is a genetic disorder associated with severe motor and cognitive deficits and preferential degeneration of medium spiny GABAergic neurons located in the striatum (Harper, 1991)
3-nitropropionic acid (3-NP)-induced mitochondrial complex II defect is associated with calpain activation To further characterize the mechanism of cell death involved in striatal degeneration associated with complex II defect in vivo, we studied the pattern of cleavage of fodrin in the two models of mitochondrial defects
We used two different animal models of mitochondrial blockade associated either with transient or sustained complex II inhibition, and we found that whereas activation of calpain was observed in both conditions, this was not the case for another death effector protease, caspase-3
Summary
Huntington’s disease (HD) is a genetic disorder associated with severe motor and cognitive deficits and preferential degeneration of medium spiny GABAergic neurons located in the striatum (Harper, 1991). Whereas the genetic defect responsible for HD is identified as an expansion of polyglutamine sequences within the huntingtin (Htt) protein (Huntington’s Disease Collaborative Research Group, 1993), most of the pathological mechanisms linking the mutant protein to the selective neurodegeneration observed in the patient’s brain remain highly speculative. Mechanisms of cell death implicated in HD pathogenesis include oxidative stress, mitochondrial defects, excitotoxicity, and activation of death effector proteases. The mitochondrial defects most consistently found in HD involve the succinate. Received Nov. 5, 2002; revised Feb. 27, 2003; accepted March 26, 2003. Moya and Hirad Hedayat for comments and critical reading of this manuscript
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