Abstract

Abstract The causative mutation for Huntington disease (HD), an expanded trinucleotide repeat sequence in the first exon of the huntingtin gene (HTT) is naturally polymorphic and inevitably associated with disease symptoms above 39 CAG repeats. Although symptomatic medical therapies for HD can improve the motor and non-motor symptoms for affected patients, these drugs do not stop the ongoing neurodegeneration and progression of the disease, which results in severe motor and cognitive disability and death. To date, there is still an urgent need for the development of effective disease‐modifying therapies to slow or even stop the progression of HD. The increasing ability to intervene directly at the roots of the disease, namely HTT transcription and translation of its mRNA, makes it necessary to understand the pathogenesis of HD as precisely as possible. In addition to the long-postulated toxicity of the polyglutamine-expanded mutant HTT protein, there is increasing evidence that the CAG repeat-containing RNA might also be directly involved in toxicity. Recent studies have identified cis- (DNA repair genes) and trans- (loss/duplication of CAA interruption) acting variants as major modifiers of age at onset (AO) and disease progression. More and more extensive data indicate that somatic instability functions as a driver for AO as well as disease progression and severity, not only in HD but also in other polyglutamine diseases. Thus, somatic expansions of repetitive DNA sequences may be essential to promote respective repeat lengths to reach a threshold leading to the overt neurodegenerative symptoms of trinucleotide diseases. These findings support somatic expansion as a potential therapeutic target in HD and related repeat expansion disorders.

Highlights

  • Huntington disease (HD) is a slowly progressive and fatal neurodegenerative disorder, which is inherited in an autosomal dominant manner and characterized by movement disorders and changes in behavior and mental state

  • The underlying mutation is the expansion of a physiologically polymorphic CAG trinucleotide repeat in exon 1, which is translated into an elongated polyglutamine tract in the huntingtin protein (HTT) [2]

  • Findings that interruptions of the CAG repeat within protein-coding transgenes mitigate toxicity and that an untranslated CAG repeat RNA can cause toxicity on its own further support a role of RNA in polyglutamine diseases

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Summary

Introduction

Huntington disease (HD) is a slowly progressive and fatal neurodegenerative disorder, which is inherited in an autosomal dominant manner and characterized by movement disorders and changes in behavior and mental state. Recent studies have identified cis- (DNA repair genes) and trans(loss/duplication of CAA interruption) acting variants as major modifiers of age at onset (AO) and disease progression.

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