Abstract

Huntington’s disease (HD) is a severe inherited neurological disorder caused by a CAG repeat expansion in the huntingtin gene (HTT), leading to the accumulation of mutant huntingtin with polyglutamine repeats. Despite its severity, there is no cure for this debilitating disease. HTT lowering strategies, including antisense oligonucleotides (ASO) showed promising results very recently. Attempts to develop stem cell-based therapeutics have shown efficacy in preclinical HD models. Using an HD patient’s autologous cells, which have genetic defects, may hamper therapeutic efficacy due to mutant HTT. Pretreating these cells to reduce mutant HTT expression and transcription may improve the transplanted cells’ therapeutic efficacy. To investigate this, we targeted the SUPT4H1 gene that selectively supports the transcription of long trinucleotide repeats. Transplanting SUPT4H1-edited HD-induced pluripotent stem cell-derived neural precursor cells (iPSC-NPCs) into the YAC128 HD transgenic mouse model improved motor function compared to unedited HD iPSC-NPCs. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed reduced mutant HTT expression without compensating wild-type HTT expression. Further, SUPT4H1 editing increased neuronal and decreased reactive astrocyte differentiation in HD iPSC-NPCs compared to the unedited HD iPSC-NPCs. This suggests that ex vivo editing of SUPT4H1 can reduce mutant HTT expression and provide a therapeutic gene editing strategy for autologous stem cell transplantation in HD.

Highlights

  • Huntington’s disease (HD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder caused by the abnormal expansion of CAG repeats (>40) in the huntingtin gene (HTT) exon 11

  • We investigated whether targeted ablation of SUPT4H1 (SUPT4H1-edited) in induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-NPCs derived from human HD

  • To investigate the potential therapeutic effects of SUPT4H1 knockdown in iPSC-NPCs, we first established NPC differentiation from iPSCs derived from an HD patient with 57 CAG repeats (Cell npj Regenerative Medicine (2022) 8

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Summary

Introduction

Huntington’s disease (HD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder caused by the abnormal expansion of CAG repeats (>40) in the huntingtin gene (HTT) exon 11. HD patients display progressive brain atrophy with increases in lateral ventricle size. These changes are followed by cognitive deficits, motor control impairment, and psychological symptoms. Effective neurorestorative or neurodegenerative strategies based on human stem cells are potential therapeutics. Patient-specific iPSCs are a potentially renewable source of autologous cells for stem cell therapy that will not induce immune rejection[5,6,7]. Gene modification before transplantation may increase the therapeutic potential of autologous iPSC therapy

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