Huntington disease update: new insights into the role of repeat instability in disease pathogenesis

被引:7
作者
Arning, Larissa [1 ]
Nguyen, Huu Phuc [1 ]
机构
[1] Ruhr Univ Bochum, Med Fac, Dept Human Genet, D-44780 Bochum, Germany
关键词
Huntington disease; repeat expansion disorders; somatic repeat expansion; genetic modifiers; NEURONAL INTRANUCLEAR INCLUSIONS; CAG TRIPLET REPEAT; KNOCK-IN MICE; TRINUCLEOTIDE REPEAT; SOMATIC EXPANSION; DNA-REPAIR; CTG REPEAT; LENGTH; GENE; IDENTIFICATION;
D O I
10.1515/medgen-2021-2101
中图分类号
Q3 [遗传学];
学科分类号
071007 ; 090102 ;
摘要
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.
引用
收藏
页码:293 / 300
页数:8
相关论文
共 75 条
  • [1] High resolution time-course mapping of early transcriptomic, molecular and cellular phenotypes in Huntington's disease CAG knock-in mice across multiple genetic backgrounds
    Ament, Seth A.
    Pearl, Jocelynn R.
    Grindeland, Andrea
    Claire, Jason St.
    Earls, John C.
    Kovalenko, Marina
    Gillis, Tammy
    Mysore, Jayalakshmi
    Gusella, James F.
    Lee, Jong-Min
    Kwak, Seung
    Howland, David
    Lee, Min Young
    Baxter, David
    Scherler, Kelsey
    Wang, Kai
    Geman, Donald
    Carroll, Jeffrey B.
    MacDonald, Marcy E.
    Carlson, George
    Wheeler, Vanessa C.
    Price, Nathan D.
    Hood, Leroy E.
    [J]. HUMAN MOLECULAR GENETICS, 2017, 26 (05) : 913 - 922
  • [2] The search for modifier genes in Huntington disease Multifactorial aspects of a monogenic disorder
    Arning, Larissa
    [J]. MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR PROBES, 2016, 30 (06) : 404 - 409
  • [3] Protein aggregates in Huntington's disease
    Arrasate, Montserrat
    Finkbeiner, Steven
    [J]. EXPERIMENTAL NEUROLOGY, 2012, 238 (01) : 1 - 11
  • [4] RAN Translation in Huntington Disease
    Banez-Coronel, Monica
    Ayhan, Fatma
    Tarabochia, Alex D.
    Zu, Tao
    Perez, Barbara A.
    Tusi, Solaleh Khoramian
    Pletnikova, Olga
    Borchelt, David R.
    Ross, Christopher A.
    Margolis, Russell L.
    Yachnis, Anthony T.
    Troncoso, Juan C.
    Ranum, Laura P. W.
    [J]. NEURON, 2015, 88 (04) : 667 - 677
  • [5] Intranuclear neuronal inclusions in Huntington's disease and dentatorubral and pallidoluysian atrophy: Correlation between the density of inclusions and IT15 CAG triplet repeat length
    Becher, MW
    Kotzuk, JA
    Sharp, AH
    Davies, SW
    Bates, GP
    Price, DL
    Ross, CA
    [J]. NEUROBIOLOGY OF DISEASE, 1998, 4 (06) : 387 - 397
  • [6] Frequency of the loss of CAA interruption in theHTTCAG tract and implications for Huntington disease in the reduced penetrance range
    Black, Hailey Findlay
    Wright, Galen E. B.
    Collins, Jennifer A.
    Caron, Nicholas
    Kay, Chris
    Xia, Qingwen
    Arning, Larissa
    Bijlsma, Emilia K.
    Squitieri, Ferdinando
    Huu Phuc Nguyen
    Hayden, Michael R.
    [J]. GENETICS IN MEDICINE, 2020, 22 (12) : 2108 - 2113
  • [7] Identification and characterization of 5′ CCG interruptions in complex DMPK expanded alleles
    Botta, Annalisa
    Rossi, Giulia
    Marcaurelio, Marzia
    Fontana, Luana
    D'Apice, Maria Rosaria
    Brancati, Francesco
    Massa, Roberto
    Monckton, Darren G.
    Sangiuolo, Federica
    Novelli, Giuseppe
    [J]. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS, 2017, 25 (02) : 257 - 261
  • [8] EVIDENCE FOR A MECHANISM PREDISPOSING TO INTERGENERATIONAL CAG REPEAT INSTABILITY IN SPINOCEREBELLAR ATAXIA TYPE-I
    CHUNG, MY
    RANUM, LPW
    DUVICK, LA
    SERVADIO, A
    ZOGHBI, HY
    ORR, HT
    [J]. NATURE GENETICS, 1993, 5 (03) : 254 - 258
  • [9] A genetic association study of glutamine-encoding DNA sequence structures, somatic CAG expansion, and DNA repair gene variants, with Huntington disease clinical outcomes
    Ciosi, Marc
    Maxwell, Alastair
    Cumming, Sarah A.
    Moss, Davina J. Hensman
    Alshammari, Asma M.
    Flower, Michael D.
    Durr, Alexandra
    Leavitt, Blair R.
    Roos, Raymund A. C.
    Holmans, Peter
    Jones, Lesley
    Langbehn, Douglas R.
    Kwak, Seung
    Tabrizi, Sarah J.
    Monckton, Darren G.
    [J]. EBIOMEDICINE, 2019, 48 : 568 - 580
  • [10] Formation of neuronal intranuclear inclusions underlies the neurological dysfunction in mice transgenic for the HD mutation
    Davies, SW
    Turmaine, M
    Cozens, BA
    DiFiglia, M
    Sharp, AH
    Ross, CA
    Scherzinger, E
    Wanker, EE
    Mangiarini, L
    Bates, GP
    [J]. CELL, 1997, 90 (03) : 537 - 548