Abstract

The family of histone deacetylases (HDACs) has recently emerged as important drug targets for treatment of slow progressive neurodegenerative disorders, including Huntington’s disease (HD). Broad pharmaceutical inhibition of HDACs has shown neuroprotective effects in various HD models. Here we examined the susceptibility of HDAC targets for drug treatment in affected brain areas during HD progression. We observed increased HDAC1 and decreased HDAC4, 5 and 6 levels, correlating with disease progression, in cortices and striata of HD R6/2 mice. However, there were no significant changes in HDAC protein levels, assessed in an age-dependent manner, in HD knock-in CAG140 mice and we did not observe significant changes in HDAC1 levels in human HD brains. We further assessed acetylation levels of α-tubulin, as a biomarker of HDAC6 activity, and found it unchanged in cortices from R6/2, knock-in, and human subjects at all disease stages. Inhibition of deacetylase activities was identical in cortical extracts from R6/2 and wild-type mice treated with a class II-selective HDAC inhibitor. Lastly, treatment with class I- and II-selective HDAC inhibitors showed similar responses in HD and wild-type rat striatal cells. In conclusion, our results show that class I and class II HDAC targets are present and accessible for chronic drug treatment during HD progression and provide impetus for therapeutic development of brain-permeable class- or isoform-selective inhibitors.

Highlights

  • The histone deacetylases (HDACs) family includes eleven Zn++-dependent deacetylases belonging to three structural classes [1] [2]

  • GAPDH was used as control.E) Quantification of class II HDAC protein levels from western blots shown in (D)

  • Our results demonstrate a statistically significant increase in HDAC1 and decrease in HDAC4, HDAC5 and HDAC6 levels in cortex and striatum of R6/2 transgenic Huntington’s disease (HD) mice at both early and terminal disease stages

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Summary

Introduction

The HDAC family includes eleven Zn++-dependent deacetylases belonging to three structural classes [1] [2]. Class II includes HDAC4, HDAC5, HDAC7 and HDAC9, exhibiting distinct tissue-specific patterns of expression, and the ubiquitously expressed cytoplasmic microtubule (?-tubulin) deacetylase, HDAC6. The mutant huntingtin protein, containing a pathologically expanded polyglutamine sequence near the Nterminus, causes a progressive and fatal neurological phenotype [7]. Dysfunction and degeneration of cerebral cortical and striatal neurons underlie the symptoms of HD and the progressive functional decline that occurs[8] [9]. The precise mechanism(s) of neurodegeneration remain unknown, neuronal homeostasis is profoundly perturbed by transcriptional dysregulation, abnormal histone acetylation and chromatin remodeling, aberrant protein interactions, mutant protein misfolding and aggregation, defects in axonal transport, and synaptic dysfunction

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