Abstract

Huntington´s disease (HD) is a hereditary neurodegenerative disease resulting from an expanded polyglutamine sequence (poly-Q) in the protein huntingtin (HTT). Various studies report atrophy and metabolic pathology of skeletal muscle in HD and suggest as part of the process a fast-to-slow fiber type transition that may be caused by the pathological changes in central motor control or/and by mutant HTT in the muscle tissue itself. To investigate muscle pathology in HD, we used R6/2 mice, a common animal model for a rapidly progressing variant of the disease expressing exon 1 of the mutant human gene. We investigated alterations in the extensor digitorum longus (EDL), a typical fast-twitch muscle, and the soleus (SOL), a slow-twitch muscle. We focussed on mechanographic measurements of excised muscles using single and repetitive electrical stimulation and on the expression of the various myosin isoforms (heavy and light chains) using dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) of whole muscle and single fiber preparations. In EDL of R6/2, the functional tests showed a left shift of the force-frequency relation and decrease in specific force. Moreover, the estimated relative contribution of the fastest myosin isoform MyHC IIb decreased, whereas the contribution of the slower MyHC IIx isoform increased. An additional change occurred in the alkali MyLC forms showing a decrease in 3f and an increase in 1f level. In SOL, a shift from fast MyHC IIa to the slow isoform I was detectable in male R6/2 mice only, and there was no evidence of isoform interconversion in the MyLC pattern. These alterations point to a partial remodeling of the contractile apparatus of R6/2 mice towards a slower contractile phenotype, predominantly in fast glycolytic fibers.

Highlights

  • Huntington’s disease (HD) is a genetic neuropathy associated with severe motoric dysfunction [1, 2]

  • HD is of autosomal dominant inheritance and results from an expanded cytosine-adenine-guanine triplet repeat (CAG)n in exon 1 of the IT15 gene (HTT) leading to an elongated polyglutamine stretch in the N-terminal region of the protein huntingtin (HTT)

  • The pathology in HD is thought to result mainly from a gain of function caused by toxic polyglutamine-containing fragments that are capable of forming protein aggregates [3]

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Summary

Introduction

Huntington’s disease (HD) is a genetic neuropathy associated with severe motoric dysfunction [1, 2]. HD is of autosomal dominant inheritance and results from an expanded cytosine-adenine-guanine triplet repeat (CAG)n in exon 1 of the IT15 gene (HTT) leading to an elongated polyglutamine (polyQ) stretch in the N-terminal region of the protein huntingtin (HTT). The pathology in HD is thought to result mainly from a gain of function caused by toxic polyglutamine-containing fragments that are capable of forming protein aggregates [3]. Neurons of the striatum and cortex are predominantly affected [4, 5]. A number of studies indicate mitochondrial dysfunction as an important contributor to the pathology [8,9,10,11,12,13,14]. In addition several results point to altered Ca2+ homeostasis and excitotoxicity in affected neurons [15, 16]

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