Abstract

Huntington’s disease (HD) is a neurodegenerative disease that results in motor and cognitive dysfunction, leading to early death. HD is caused by an expansion of CAG repeats in the huntingtin gene (HTT). Here, we review the mouse models of HD. They have been used extensively to better understand the molecular and cellular basis of disease pathogenesis as well as to provide non-human subjects to test the efficacy of potential therapeutics. The first and best-studied in vivo rodent model of HD is the R6/2 mouse, in which a transgene containing the promoter and exon 1 fragment of human HTT with 150 CAG repeats was inserted into the mouse genome. R6/2 mice express rapid, robust behavioral pathologies and display a number of degenerative abnormalities in neuronal populations most vulnerable in HD. The first conditional full-length mutant huntingtin (mHTT) mouse model of HD was the bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) transgenic mouse model of HD (BACHD), which expresses human full-length mHTT with a mixture of 97 CAG-CAA repeats under the control of endogenous HTT regulatory machinery. It has been useful in identifying the role of mHTT in specific neuronal populations in degenerative processes. In the knock-in (KI) model of HD, the expanded human CAG repeats and human exon 1 are inserted into the mouse Htt locus, so a chimera of the full-length mouse protein with the N-terminal human portion is expressed. Many of aspects of the pathology and behavioral deficits in the KI model better mimic disease characteristics found in HD patients than other models. Accordingly, some have proposed that these mice may be preferable models of the disease over others. Indeed, as our understanding of HD advances, so will the design of animal models to test and develop HD therapies.

Highlights

  • Huntington’s disease (HD) is caused by an expansion of CAG repeats in the huntingtin gene (HTT)[1], which leads to neurological deficits, including motor impairment[2] and cognitive decline[3]

  • Reducing mutant huntingtin (mHTT) levels in cortical neurons improved neuronal activity in cortical neurons[124]. These findings suggest that mHTT in both cortico-striatal pyramidal neurons and medium spiny-like neurons (MSNs) contributes to synaptic deficits in striatal MSNs

  • The development of in vivo animal models of HD has greatly added to our understanding of the biology of HD and the molecular and cellular pathways that drive pathogenesis

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Summary

Introduction

Huntington’s disease (HD) is caused by an expansion of CAG repeats in the huntingtin gene (HTT)[1], which leads to neurological deficits, including motor impairment[2] and cognitive decline[3]. Electrophysiological analysis of MSNs of 6-month-old BACHD mice demonstrated selective reduction of large-amplitude EPSCs in striatal neurons[120] These changes are paralleled by decreased cortical parvalbumin (PV) interneuron excitation and decreased pyramidal cell inhibition, resulting in increased cortico-striatal excitability onto striatal MSNs and a decline in motor function[123]. A study by Arnoux et al (2018)[161] using in vivo two-photon Ca2+ imaging in premanifest Hdh(CAG)[150] KI mice showed increased neuronal activity in the visual cortex This finding is consistent with early signs of hyperactivity in cortical networks found in other HD models and the finding that early in HD the visual cortex is one of the first brain regions to show dysfunction[162]. Others have used the KI mice to investigate the role of epigenetic changes that contribute to chromatin remodeling[171] and DNA repair alterations in HD172,173

Conclusions
23. Walker FO
Findings
98. Danbolt NC
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