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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (
Mol
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630,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Huntington's disease (HD) is a neurodegenerative disease associated with polyglutamine expansion in
huntingtin
, a widely expressed protein. The function of
huntingtin
is unknown although
huntingtin
plays a fundamental role in development since gene targeted HD (-) (/-)mouse embryos die shortly after gastrulation. Expression of
huntingtin
is detected in spleen and thymus but its role in hematopoiesis has not been examined. To determine the function of
huntingtin
and to provide insight into potential pathologic mechanisms in HD, we analyzed the role of
huntingtin
in hematopoietic development. Expression of
huntingtin
was analyzed in a variety of hematopoietic cell types, and in vitro hematopoiesis was assessed using an HD ( +/-)and several HD( -) (/-)embryonic stem (ES) cell lines. Although wild-type, HD ( +/-)and HD( -) (/-)ES cell lines formed primary embryoid bodies (EBs) with similar efficiency, the numbers of hematopoietic progenitors detected at various stages of the in vitro differentiation were reduced in HD ( +/-)and HD( -/-)() ()ES cell lines examined. Expression analyses of hematopoietic markers within the EBs revealed that primitive and definitive hematopoiesis occurs in the absence of
huntingtin
. However, further analysis using a suspension culture in the presence of hematopoietic cytokines demonstrated a highly significant gene dosage-dependent decrease in proliferation and/or survival of HD ( +/-)and HD( -) (/-)cells. Enrichment for the CD34(+)cells within the EB confirmed that the impairment is intrinsic to the hematopoietic cells. These obser- vations suggest that
huntingtin
expression is required for the generation and expansion of hematopoietic cells and provides an alternative system in which to assess the function of
huntingtin
.
Hum
Mol
Genet 2000 Feb 12
PMID:Huntingtin is required for normal hematopoiesis. 1065 48
Huntington's disease (HD) is caused by an expanded N-terminal glutamine tract that endows
huntingtin
with a striatal-selective structural property ultimately toxic to medium spiny neurons. In precise genetic models of juvenile HD, HdhQ92 and HdhQ111 knock-in mice, long polyglutamine segments change
huntingtin
's physical properties, producing HD-like in vivo correlates in the striatum, including nuclear localization of a version of the full-length protein predominant in medium spiny neurons, and subsequent formation of N-terminal inclusions and insoluble aggregate. These changes show glutamine length dependence and dominant inheritance with recruitment of wild-type protein, critical features of the altered HD property that strongly implicate them in the HD disease process and that suggest alternative pathogenic scenarios: the effect of the glutamine tract may act by altering interaction with a critical cellular constituent or by depleting a form of
huntingtin
essential to medium spiny striatal neurons.
Hum
Mol
Genet 2000 Mar 01
PMID:Long glutamine tracts cause nuclear localization of a novel form of huntingtin in medium spiny striatal neurons in HdhQ92 and HdhQ111 knock-in mice. 1069 73
To understand gene expression changes mediated by a polyglutamine repeat expansion in the human
huntingtin
protein, we used oligonucleotide DNA arrays to profile approximately 6000 striatal mRNAs in the R6/2 mouse, a transgenic Huntington's disease (HD) model. We found diminished levels of mRNAs encoding components of the neurotransmitter, calcium and retinoid signaling pathways at both early and late symptomatic time points (6 and 12 weeks of age). We observed similar changes in gene expression in another HD mouse model (N171-82Q). These results demonstrate that mutant
huntingtin
directly or indirectly reduces the expression of a distinct set of genes involved in signaling pathways known to be critical to striatal neuron function.
Hum
Mol
Genet 2000 May 22
PMID:Decreased expression of striatal signaling genes in a mouse model of Huntington's disease. 1081 8
Huntingtin-associated protein-1 (HAP1) binds more tightly to mutant
huntingtin
, but its function and distribution in neurites are not clear. Using PC12 cells and cultured hippocampal neurons, we found that two HAP1 isoforms, HAP1-A and HAP1-B, have different subcellular localizations. While most HAP1-B is diffusely distributed within the cytoplasm, HAP1-A is enriched in the growth cones and neuritic puncta of developing neurons. In mature neurons and adult brain neurons, however, HAP1-A is concentrated in axon terminals and associated with synaptic vesicles. Transfection of HAP1-A in PC12 cells significantly promotes neurite extension, with HAP1-A distributed in the distal regions of the growing neurites. Cotransfection of mutant
huntingtin
with HAP1-A in PC12 cells results in the accumulation of HAP1-A on
huntingtin
aggregates and the inhibition of neurite promotion by HAP1-A. This study suggests that HAP1-A has a function in neuritic development and synaptic function and that mutant
huntingtin
may alter this function.
Mol
Cell Neurosci 2000 Aug
PMID:Expression of huntingtin-associated protein-1 in neuronal cells implicates a role in neuritic growth. 1092 59
Huntington's disease (HD) is an autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disorder caused by polyglutamine expansion in the disease protein,
huntingtin
. In HD patients and transgenic mice, the affected neurons form characteristic ubiquitin-positive nuclear inclusions (NIs). We have established ecdysone-inducible stable mouse Neuro2a cell lines that express truncated N-terminal
huntingtin
(tNhtt) with different polyglutamine lengths which form both cytoplasmic and nuclear aggregates in a polyglutamine length- and inducer dose-dependent manner. Here we demonstrate that newly synthesized polyglutamine-expanded truncated
huntingtin
interacts with members of Hsp40 and Hsp70 families of chaperones in a polyglutamine length-dependent manner. Of these interacting chaperones, only Hdj-2 and Hsc70 frequently (Hdj-2 > Hsc70) co-localize with both the aggregates in the cellular model and with the NIs in the brains of HD exon 1 transgenic mice. However, Hdj-2 and Hsc70 do not co-localize with cytoplasmic aggregates in the brains of transgenic mice despite these chaperones being primarily localized in the cytoplasmic compartment. This strongly suggests that the chaperone interaction and their redistribution to the aggregates are two completely different phenomena of the cellular unfolded protein response. This unfolded protein response is also evident from the dramatic induction of Hsp70 on expression of polyglutamine-expanded protein in the cellular model. Transient overexpression of either Hdj-1 or Hsc70 suppresses the aggregate formation; however, suppression efficiency is much higher in Hdj-1 compared with Hsc70. Overexpression of Hdj-1 and Hsc70 is also able to protect cell death caused by polyglutamine-expanded tNhtt and their combination proved to be most effective.
Hum
Mol
Genet 2000 Aug 12
PMID:Polyglutamine length-dependent interaction of Hsp40 and Hsp70 family chaperones with truncated N-terminal huntingtin: their role in suppression of aggregation and cellular toxicity. 1094 30
An elongated glutamine tract in mutant
huntingtin
initiates Huntington's disease (HD) pathogenesis via a novel structural property that displays neuronal selectivity, glutamine progressivity and dominance over the normal protein based on genetic criteria. As this mechanism is likely to involve a deleterious protein interaction, we have assessed the major class of
huntingtin
interactors comprising three WW domain proteins. These are revealed to be related spliceosome proteins (HYPA/FBP-11 and HYPC) and a transcription factor (HYPB) that implicate
huntingtin
in mRNA biogenesis. In HD post-mortem brain, specific antibody reagents detect each partner in HD target neurons, in association with disease-related N-terminal morphologic deposits but not with filter trapped insoluble-aggregate. Glutathione S:-transferase partner 'pull-down' assays reveal soluble, aberrantly migrating, forms of full-length mutant
huntingtin
specific to HD target tissue. Importantly, these novel mutant species exhibit exaggerated WW domain binding that abrogates partner association with other
huntingtin
isoforms. Thus, each WW domain partner's association with
huntingtin
fulfills HD genetic criteria, supporting a direct role in pathogenesis. Our findings indicate that modification of mutant
huntingtin
in target neurons may promote an abnormal interaction with one, or all, of
huntingtin
's WW domain partners, perhaps altering ribonucleoprotein function with toxic consequences.
Hum
Mol
Genet 2000 Sep 01
PMID:Huntingtin's WW domain partners in Huntington's disease post-mortem brain fulfill genetic criteria for direct involvement in Huntington's disease pathogenesis. 1095 56
Huntington's disease (HD) is an inherited neurodegenerative disorder that affects about one in 10,000 individuals in North America. The genetic defect responsible for the disease is an expansion of a CAG repeat that encodes a polyglutamine tract in the expressed protein,
huntingtin
. The disease is characterized by involuntary movements, cognitive impairment, and emotional disturbance. Despite the widespread expression of
huntingtin
, the brains of HD patients show selective neuronal loss in the striatum and the deep layers of the cerebral cortex. Recent studies have shown that polyglutamine expansion causes
huntingtin
to aggregate, to accumulate in the nucleus, and to interact abnormally with other proteins. Several cellular and animal models for HD have revealed that intranuclear accumulation of mutant
huntingtin
and the formation of neuropil aggregates precede neurological symptoms and neurodegeneration. Intranuclear
huntingtin
may affect nuclear function and the expression of genes important for neuronal function, whereas neuropil aggregates may interfere with neuritic transport and function. These early pathological events, which occur in the absence of neurodegeneration, may contribute to the neurological symptoms of HD and ultimately lead to neuronal cell death.
Mol
Neurobiol
PMID:The early cellular pathology of Huntington's disease. 1096 17
An unstable CAG triplet repeat expansion encoding a polyglutamine stretch within the ubiquitously expressed protein
huntingtin
is responsible for causing Huntington's disease (HD). By quantifying the repeat sizes of individual mutant alleles in tissues derived from an accurate genetic mouse model of HD we show that the mutation becomes very unstable in striatal tissue. The expansion-biased changes increase with age, such that some striatal cells from old HD mice contain mutations that have tripled in size. If this pattern of repeat instability is recapitulated in human striatal tissue, the concomitant increased polyglutamine load may contribute to the patterns of selective neuronal cell death in HD. Our findings also suggest that trinucleotide repeat instability can occur by mechanisms that are not replication-based.
Hum
Mol
Genet 2000 Oct 12
PMID:Dramatic mutation instability in HD mouse striatum: does polyglutamine load contribute to cell-specific vulnerability in Huntington's disease? 1103 Jul 59
Huntington's disease (HD), with its selective neuronal cell loss, is caused by an elongated glutamine tract in the
huntingtin
protein. To discover the pathways that are candidates for the protein's normal and/or abnormal function, we surveyed 19 classes of organelle in Hdh(ex4/5)/Hdh(ex4/5) knock-out compared with wild-type embryonic stem cells to identify any that might be affected by
huntingtin
deficiency. Although the majority did not differ, dramatic changes in six classes revealed that
huntingtin
's function is essential for the normal nuclear (nucleoli, transcription factor-speckles) and perinuclear membrane (mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi and recycling endosomes) organelles and for proper regulation of the iron pathway. Moreover, upmodulation by deferoxamine mesylate implicates
huntingtin
as an iron-response protein. However, excess
huntingtin
produced abnormal organelles that resemble the deficiency phenotype, suggesting the importance of
huntingtin
level to the protein's normal pathway. Thus, organelles that require
huntingtin
to function suggest roles for the protein in RNA biogenesis, trafficking and iron homeostasis to be explored in HD pathogenesis.
Hum
Mol
Genet 2000 Nov 22
PMID:Huntingtin: an iron-regulated protein essential for normal nuclear and perinuclear organelles. 1109 55
Lengthening a glutamine tract in
huntingtin
confers a dominant attribute that initiates degeneration of striatal neurons in Huntington's disease (HD). To identify pathways that are candidates for the mutant protein's abnormal function, we compared striatal cell lines established from wild-type and Hdh(Q111) knock-in embryos. Alternate versions of full-length
huntingtin
, distinguished by epitope accessibility, were localized to different sets of nuclear and perinuclear organelles involved in RNA biogenesis and membrane trafficking. However, mutant STHdh(Q111) cells also exhibited additional forms of the full-length mutant protein and displayed dominant phenotypes that did not mirror phenotypes caused by either
huntingtin
deficiency or excess. These phenotypes indicate a disruption of striatal cell homeostasis by the mutant protein, via a mechanism that is separate from its normal activity. They also support specific stress pathways, including elevated p53, endoplasmic reticulum stress response and hypoxia, as potential players in HD.
Hum
Mol
Genet 2000 Nov 22
PMID:Dominant phenotypes produced by the HD mutation in STHdh(Q111) striatal cells. 1109 56
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