Literature DB >> 22375012

Native mutant huntingtin in human brain: evidence for prevalence of full-length monomer.

Ellen Sapp1, Antonio Valencia, Xueyi Li, Neil Aronin, Kimberly B Kegel, Jean-Paul Vonsattel, Anne B Young, Nancy Wexler, Marian DiFiglia.   

Abstract

Huntington disease (HD) is caused by polyglutamine expansion in the N terminus of huntingtin (htt). Analysis of human postmortem brain lysates by SDS-PAGE and Western blot reveals htt as full-length and fragmented. Here we used Blue Native PAGE (BNP) and Western blots to study native htt in human postmortem brain. Antisera against htt detected a single band broadly migrating at 575-850 kDa in control brain and at 650-885 kDa in heterozygous and Venezuelan homozygous HD brains. Anti-polyglutamine antisera detected full-length mutant htt in HD brain. There was little htt cleavage even if lysates were pretreated with trypsin, indicating a property of native htt to resist protease cleavage. A soluble mutant htt fragment of about 180 kDa was detected with anti-htt antibody Ab1 (htt-(1-17)) and increased when lysates were treated with denaturants (SDS, 8 M urea, DTT, or trypsin) before BNP. Wild-type htt was more resistant to denaturants. Based on migration of in vitro translated htt fragments, the 180-kDa segment terminated ≈htt 670-880 amino acids. If second dimension SDS-PAGE followed BNP, the 180-kDa mutant htt was absent, and 43-50 kDa htt fragments appeared. Brain lysates from two HD mouse models expressed native full-length htt; a mutant fragment formed if lysates were pretreated with 8 M urea + DTT. Native full-length mutant htt in embryonic HD(140Q/140Q) mouse primary neurons was intact during cell death and when cell lysates were exposed to denaturants before BNP. Thus, native mutant htt occurs in brain and primary neurons as a soluble full-length monomer.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22375012      PMCID: PMC3339996          DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M111.286609

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  52 in total

1.  Polyglutamine expansion in huntingtin alters its interaction with phospholipids.

Authors:  Kimberly B Kegel; Ellen Sapp; Jonathan Alexander; Antonio Valencia; Patrick Reeves; Xueyi Li; Nicholas Masso; Lindsay Sobin; Neil Aronin; Marian DiFiglia
Journal:  J Neurochem       Date:  2009-06-29       Impact factor: 5.372

2.  Aggregation of huntingtin in neuronal intranuclear inclusions and dystrophic neurites in brain.

Authors:  M DiFiglia; E Sapp; K O Chase; S W Davies; G P Bates; J P Vonsattel; N Aronin
Journal:  Science       Date:  1997-09-26       Impact factor: 47.728

3.  CAG expansion affects the expression of mutant Huntingtin in the Huntington's disease brain.

Authors:  N Aronin; K Chase; C Young; E Sapp; C Schwarz; N Matta; R Kornreich; B Landwehrmeyer; E Bird; M F Beal
Journal:  Neuron       Date:  1995-11       Impact factor: 17.173

4.  Huntingtin phosphorylation sites mapped by mass spectrometry. Modulation of cleavage and toxicity.

Authors:  Birgit Schilling; Juliette Gafni; Cameron Torcassi; Xin Cong; Richard H Row; Michelle A LaFevre-Bernt; Michael P Cusack; Tamara Ratovitski; Ricky Hirschhorn; Christopher A Ross; Bradford W Gibson; Lisa M Ellerby
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2006-06-16       Impact factor: 5.157

5.  Lysosomal proteases are involved in generation of N-terminal huntingtin fragments.

Authors:  Yun J Kim; Ellen Sapp; Benjamin G Cuiffo; Lindsay Sobin; Jennifer Yoder; Kimberly B Kegel; Zheng-Hong Qin; Peter Detloff; Neil Aronin; Marian DiFiglia
Journal:  Neurobiol Dis       Date:  2006-01-19       Impact factor: 5.996

6.  Expression and characterization of full-length human huntingtin, an elongated HEAT repeat protein.

Authors:  Wei Li; Louise C Serpell; Wendy J Carter; David C Rubinsztein; James A Huntington
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2006-04-04       Impact factor: 5.157

7.  Huntingtin expression stimulates endosomal-lysosomal activity, endosome tubulation, and autophagy.

Authors:  K B Kegel; M Kim; E Sapp; C McIntyre; J G Castaño; N Aronin; M DiFiglia
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2000-10-01       Impact factor: 6.167

8.  Time course of early motor and neuropathological anomalies in a knock-in mouse model of Huntington's disease with 140 CAG repeats.

Authors:  Liliana B Menalled; Jessica D Sison; Ioannis Dragatsis; Scott Zeitlin; Marie-Françoise Chesselet
Journal:  J Comp Neurol       Date:  2003-10-06       Impact factor: 3.215

9.  Huntingtin is a cytoplasmic protein associated with vesicles in human and rat brain neurons.

Authors:  M DiFiglia; E Sapp; K Chase; C Schwarz; A Meloni; C Young; E Martin; J P Vonsattel; R Carraway; S A Reeves
Journal:  Neuron       Date:  1995-05       Impact factor: 17.173

10.  Identical oligomeric and fibrillar structures captured from the brains of R6/2 and knock-in mouse models of Huntington's disease.

Authors:  Kirupa Sathasivam; Amin Lane; Justin Legleiter; Alice Warley; Ben Woodman; Steve Finkbeiner; Paolo Paganetti; Paul J Muchowski; Stuart Wilson; Gillian P Bates
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  2010-01-01       Impact factor: 6.150

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  14 in total

1.  Increased SNARE Protein-Protein Interactions in Orbitofrontal and Anterior Cingulate Cortices in Schizophrenia.

Authors:  Alfredo Ramos-Miguel; Clare L Beasley; Andrew J Dwork; J John Mann; Gorazd Rosoklija; Alasdair M Barr; William G Honer
Journal:  Biol Psychiatry       Date:  2014-12-19       Impact factor: 13.382

Review 2.  Primary cilia and autophagic dysfunction in Huntington's disease.

Authors:  M Kaliszewski; A B Knott; E Bossy-Wetzel
Journal:  Cell Death Differ       Date:  2015-07-10       Impact factor: 15.828

Review 3.  Proteins Containing Expanded Polyglutamine Tracts and Neurodegenerative Disease.

Authors:  Adewale Adegbuyiro; Faezeh Sedighi; Albert W Pilkington; Sharon Groover; Justin Legleiter
Journal:  Biochemistry       Date:  2017-02-21       Impact factor: 3.162

4.  A toxic mutant huntingtin species is resistant to selective autophagy.

Authors:  Yuhua Fu; Peng Wu; Yuyin Pan; Xiaoli Sun; Huiya Yang; Marian Difiglia; Boxun Lu
Journal:  Nat Chem Biol       Date:  2017-09-04       Impact factor: 15.040

Review 5.  Founder Effects of Spinocerebellar Ataxias in the American Continents and the Caribbean.

Authors:  Roberto Rodríguez-Labrada; Ana Carolina Martins; Jonathan J Magaña; Yaimeé Vazquez-Mojena; Jacqueline Medrano-Montero; Juan Fernandez-Ruíz; Bulmaro Cisneros; Helio Teive; Karen N McFarland; Maria Luiza Saraiva-Pereira; César M Cerecedo-Zapata; Christopher M Gomez; Tetsuo Ashizawa; Luis Velázquez-Pérez; Laura Bannach Jardim
Journal:  Cerebellum       Date:  2020-06       Impact factor: 3.847

6.  Nuclear Localization of Huntingtin mRNA Is Specific to Cells of Neuronal Origin.

Authors:  Marie-Cécile Didiot; Chantal M Ferguson; Socheata Ly; Andrew H Coles; Abigail O Smith; Alicia A Bicknell; Lauren M Hall; Ellen Sapp; Dimas Echeverria; Athma A Pai; Marian DiFiglia; Melissa J Moore; Lawrence J Hayward; Neil Aronin; Anastasia Khvorova
Journal:  Cell Rep       Date:  2018-09-04       Impact factor: 9.423

7.  A series of N-terminal epitope tagged Hdh knock-in alleles expressing normal and mutant huntingtin: their application to understanding the effect of increasing the length of normal Huntingtin's polyglutamine stretch on CAG140 mouse model pathogenesis.

Authors:  Shuqiu Zheng; Nima Ghitani; Jessica S Blackburn; Jeh-Ping Liu; Scott O Zeitlin
Journal:  Mol Brain       Date:  2012-08-14       Impact factor: 4.041

8.  A striatal-enriched intronic GPCR modulates huntingtin levels and toxicity.

Authors:  Yuwei Yao; Xiaotian Cui; Ismael Al-Ramahi; Xiaoli Sun; Bo Li; Jiapeng Hou; Marian Difiglia; James Palacino; Zhi-Ying Wu; Lixiang Ma; Juan Botas; Boxun Lu
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2015-03-04       Impact factor: 8.140

9.  Folding Landscape of Mutant Huntingtin Exon1: Diffusible Multimers, Oligomers and Fibrils, and No Detectable Monomer.

Authors:  Bankanidhi Sahoo; Irene Arduini; Kenneth W Drombosky; Ravindra Kodali; Laurie H Sanders; J Timothy Greenamyre; Ronald Wetzel
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-06-06       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  Development of an ELISA assay for the quantification of soluble huntingtin in human blood cells.

Authors:  Luisa Massai; Lara Petricca; Letizia Magnoni; Luca Rovetini; Salman Haider; Ralph Andre; Sarah J Tabrizi; Sigurd D Süssmuth; Bernhard G Landwehrmeyer; Andrea Caricasole; Giuseppe Pollio; Simonetta Bernocco
Journal:  BMC Biochem       Date:  2013-11-25       Impact factor: 4.059

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