Abstract

Huntington’s disease (HD) is a neurodegenerative disorder caused by the inheritance of one mutant copy of the huntingtin gene. Mutant huntingtin protein (mHtt) contains an expanded polyglutamine repeat region near the N-terminus. Cleavage of mHtt releases an N-terminal fragment (N-mHtt) which accumulates in the nucleus. Nuclear accumulation of N-mHtt has been directly associated with cellular toxicity. Decreased transcription is among the earliest detected changes that occur in the brains of HD patients, animal and cellular models of HD. Transcriptional dysregulation may trigger many of the perturbations that occur later in disease progression. An understanding of the effects of mHtt may lead to strategies to slow the progression of HD. Current models of N-mHtt-mediated transcriptional dysregulation suggest that abnormal interactions between N-mHtt and transcription factors impair the ability of these transcription factors to associate at N-mHtt-affected promoters and properly regulate gene expression. We tested various aspects of the current models using two N-mHtt-affected promoters in two cell models of HD using overexpression of known N-mHtt-interacting transcription factors, promoter deletion and mutation analyses and in vitro promoter binding assays. Consequently, we proposed a new model of N-mHtt-mediated transcriptional dysregulation centered on the presence of N-mHtt at promoters. In this model, N-mHtt interacts with multiple partners whose presence and affinity for N-mHtt influence the severity of gene dysregulation. We concluded that simultaneous interaction of N-mHtt with multiple binding partners within the transcriptional machinery would explain the gene-specificity of N-mHtt-mediated transcriptional dysregulation, as well as why some genes are affected early in disease progression while others are affected later. Our model explains why alleviating N-mHtt-mediated transcriptional dysregulation through overexpression of N-mHtt-interacting proteins has proven to be difficult and suggests that the most realistic strategy for restoring gene expression across the spectrum of N-mHtt affected genes is by reducing the amount of soluble nuclear N-mHtt.

Highlights

  • Huntington’s disease (HD) is an autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disease [1]

  • There was no difference in the activity of the pGL3-Basic control plasmid in N548hd cells compared to N548wt cells, suggesting that N-mutant huntingtin protein (mHtt)-mediated repression of luciferase activity was specific to the cytomegalovirus immediate early gene (CMV) promoter

  • A promoter deletion experiment was performed to determine if a specific region of the CMV promoter was required for N-terminal fragment of the mutant huntingtin protein (N-mHtt)-mediated transcriptional repression

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Summary

Introduction

Huntington’s disease (HD) is an autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disease [1]. HD is recognized primarily as a movement disorder, patients suffering from HD will experience cognitive impairments and psychiatric disturbances [2]. Cleavage of the huntingtin protein (Htt) resulting in the release of a smaller Nterminal fragment has been shown to occur in unaffected individuals [8], the presence of an expanded polyQ region in the mutant huntingtin protein (mHtt) results in increased cleavage [9]. The cleaved N-terminal fragment of the mutant huntingtin protein (N-mHtt) translocates to, and accumulates in, the nucleus [10]. Both the formation of N-mHtt and its accumulation in the nucleus have been associated with cellular pathology and with the progression of the disease [11], suggesting that it is the nuclear form of N-mHtt that is most toxic to the cell

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