| Literature DB >> 22944909 |
Pawel M Switonski1, Wojciech J Szlachcic, Agnieszka Gabka, Wlodzimierz J Krzyzosiak, Maciej Figiel.
Abstract
Mouse models of human diseases are created both to understand the pathogenesis of the disorders and to find successful therapies for them. This work is the second part in a series of reviews of mouse models of polyglutamine (polyQ) hereditary disorders and focuses on in vivo experimental therapeutic approaches. Like part I of the polyQ mouse model review, this work is supplemented with a table that contains data from experimental studies of therapeutic approaches in polyQ mouse models. The aim of this review was to characterize the benefits and outcomes of various therapeutic strategies in mouse models. We examine whether the therapeutic strategies are specific to a single disease or are applicable to more than one polyQ disorder in mouse models. In addition, we discuss the suitability of mouse models in therapeutic approaches. Although the majority of therapeutic studies were performed in mouse models of Huntington disease, similar strategies were also used in other disease models.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22944909 PMCID: PMC3461214 DOI: 10.1007/s12035-012-8316-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Neurobiol ISSN: 0893-7648 Impact factor: 5.590
Fig. 1The data table is an electronic resource that provides data about the therapeutic strategies, the used behavioral and molecular protocols for testing the therapy, therapeutic substances and therapeutic outcome in mouse models. The figure demonstrates only a small fragment of the data table, and the selection of records for this figure is accidental. The full data table comprises approximately 2,000 records and 17 columns
Fig. 2The diagram shows the most studied therapeutic strategies. The therapeutic strategies are ranked by the number of therapeutic approaches that were testing a given strategy. The data table collects the total number of 250 different therapeutic approaches. The most extensively tested strategies are related to the induction of neuroprotection (with neurotrophic factors or by exposing animals to environmental stimuli), mitochondrial dysfunction, or transcriptional deregulation. Interestingly, therapeutic approaches aimed at the specific downregulation of polyQ protein expression are rarely tested in mouse models
Fig. 3Impairment of clearance machinery in polyQ diseases. Expanded polyglutamine proteins alter the physiological functions of both the UPS and the autophagic clearance pathways, thereby perturbing cellular homeostasis. Therapeutic approaches tested in polyglutamine mouse models include facilitating UPS-mediated polyQ clearance by interfering with various steps in the UPS pathway (1), increasing the levels of chaperones (2), or administrating anti-aggregation drugs (3). An increase in autophagy-mediated degradation can be achieved with mTOR inhibitors (4) and via mTOR-independent pathways (5). Ubiquitin–proteasome system (UPS), mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR)
Chaperone-related therapeutic approaches in mouse models of polyQ diseases
| Drug | Route/dose | Model | Therapeutic outcomes | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 17-AAG | Intraperitoneal (7.5 or 75 mg/kg/week) | AR-97Q (SBMA) | ✓ | Improved motor phenotype (rotarod, cage activity, gait pattern); alleviated aggregate formation and nuclear localization of mutant AR; reduced muscle atrophy; decreased body weight loss rate; prolonged life span | Waza et al. 2005 [ |
| 17-DMAG | Oral (3 or 30 mg/kg/week) | AR-97Q (SBMA) | ✓ | Improved motor phenotype (rotarod, cage activity, gait pattern); alleviated aggregate formation and nuclear localization of mutant AR; reduced muscle atrophy; decreased body weight loss rate; prolonged life span | Tokui et al. 2009 [ |
| BAG1 | Overexpression | N171-82Q (HD) | ✓ | Improved rotarod phenotype (only in males) | Orr et al. 2008 [ |
| × | No change in aggregate formation, body weight loss rate, life span, and clasping phenotype | ||||
| GGA | Oral (~600 and 1,200 mg/kg/day) | AR-97Q (SBMA) | ✓ | Improved motor phenotype (rotarod, cage activity, gait pattern); alleviated aggregate formation and nuclear localization of mutant AR; reduced muscle atrophy; decreased body weight loss rate; prolonged life span | Katsuno et al. 2005 [ |
| HSF1 | Overexpression | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Reduced muscular atrophy and muscular inclusions; prolonged life span | Fujimoto et al. 2005 [ |
| × | No change in clasping phenotype and body weight loss rate; no reduction in brain atrophy and neuronal inclusion formation | ||||
| hsp104 | Overexpression | N171-82Q (HD) | ✓ | Reduced number of cortical aggregates; prolonged life span | Vacher et al. 2005 [ |
| × | No change in rotarod and grip strength performance; no change in body weight loss rate | ||||
| Hsp70 | Overexpression (5- to 10-fold of endogenous level) | AR-97Q (SBMA) | ✓ | Improved motor phenotype (rotarod, cage activity, gait pattern); alleviated aggregate formation and nuclear localization of mutant AR; decreased body weight loss rate; prolonged life span | Adachi et al. 2003 [ |
| Hsp70 | Overexpression (~10- to 20-fold of endogenous level) | B05 (SCA1) | ✓ | Improved rotarod phenotype; improved Purkinje cell morphology | Cummings et al. 2001 [ |
| × | No change in NII formation | ||||
| Hsp70 | Overexpression (5- to 15-fold of endogenous level) | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Decreased body weight loss rate | Hansson et al. 2003 [ |
| × | No change in clasping behavior; no reduction in brain atrophy and neuronal abnormal morphology; no change in NII formation and life span | ||||
| Hsp70 | Overexpression | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Delayed aggregate formation in hippocampal slice culture | Hay et al. 2004 [ |
| × | No change in rotarod and grip strength performance; increased body weight loss rate | ||||
| HSP70/HDJ2 | Overexpression (5- to 10-fold of endogenous level) | 90Q R7E (SCA7) | × | No change in rod photoreceptor functions, no morphological changes of retinal layers, and no change in NII formation | Helmlinger et al. 2004 [ |
| HSJ1a | Overexpression | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Reduced nuclear aggregate load; increased levels of soluble huntingtin; improved rotarod performance and forelimb grip strength; improved exploratory activity; increased BDNF level | Labbadia et al. 2012 [ |
| × | No change in body and brain weight loss rate |
Fig. 4Neuroprotective and neuromodulatory strategies targeting the degenerating neurons in polyQ diseases. These experimental therapeutic strategies prevent neuronal death by supporting overall health and promoting survival. The therapy can be implemented in the following ways: by administering or inducing the expression of neurotrophic factors that promote neuronal survival (1); by exposing the animals to an enriched environment that results in the upregulation of endogenous neurotrophic factors and genes involved in synaptic plasticity, growth, and neurogenesis (2); or by other neuromodulation-related therapeutic strategies (e.g., the regulation of neurotransmitter activity) that also lead to the induction of neuroprotection (3). See the text for a detailed description
Neurotrophic factor-related therapeutic approaches in mouse models of polyQ diseases
| Drug | Route/dose | Model | Therapeutic outcomes | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BDNF | Osmotic pump (4.5 μg/day) | R6/1 (HD) | ✓ | Enhanced number of encephalin + neurons | Canals et al. 2004 [ |
| × | No change in number of substance P + neurons | ||||
| BDNF | Overexpression (3- fold of endogenous level) | R6/1 (HD) | ✓ | Improved rotarod phenotype; decreased body weight loss rate (females); increased brain weight; normalized cortical and striatal volumes; reduced aggregates formation | Gharami et al. 2008 [ |
| × | No change in ventricle size | ||||
| BDNF | Intrastriatal injection of 6 × 105 MSC cells overexpressing BDNF | YAC128 (HD) | ✓ | Improved rotarod and clasping behavior; reduced neuronal loss within the striatum | Dey et al. 2010 [ |
| BDNF | Overexpression (2-3-fold of endogenous level) | YAC128 (HD) | ✓ | Improved gait pattern, rotarod, and beam walk phenotype; reversed cognitive deficits; reduced brain atrophy and loss of striatal neurons; normalized spine morphology and expression of the striatal dopamine receptor D2 and enkephalin | Xie et al. 2010 [ |
| × | No change in grip strength | ||||
| BDNF and Noggin | Adenoviral-mediated expression (~1.5 × 109 vector genomes each) | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Improved motor phenotype (rotarod and open field activity); increased neurogenesis; prolonged life span | Cho et al. 2007 [ |
| CNTF | AAV-mediated expression (2.7 × 109 vector genomes) | R6/1 (HD) | ✓ | Increased body weight loss rate; aggravated rotarod phenotype; aggravated general appearance and behavior; no change in morphology and distribution of striatal cells; no change in aggregate load | Denovan-Wright et al. 2008 [ |
| CNTF | Lentiviral-mediated expression | YAC72 (HD) | ✓ | Reduced hyperactivity; reduced number of striatal dark cells | Zala et al. 2004 [ |
| × | No change in clasping behavior, rotarod phenotype, and brain weight loss; decreased number of DARPP-32 and neun positive neurons; no change in the number of NADPH-d neurons | ||||
| FGF-2 | Subcutaneous injection (1.5 μg/week) | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Increased neurogenesis; improved rotarod phenotype; reduced tremor; reduced aggregate formation; decreased body weight loss rate; prolonged life span | Jin et al. 2005 [ |
| GDNF | AAV-mediated expression (4 × 109 vector genomes) | N171-82Q (HD) | ✓ | Improved rotarod and clasping phenotype; increased number and volume of striatal neurons | McBride et al. 2006 [ |
| × | No change in striatal volume and number of total striatal inclusion | ||||
| GDNF | Intrastriatal injection of 3 × 105 mNPC cells overexpressing GDNF | N171-82Q (HD) | ✓ | Improved rotarod phenotype; alleviated aggregate formation; reduced neuronal loss | Ebert et al. 2010 [ |
| × | No change in cortical thickness and in number of dopamine neurons; no long-term change in body weight loss rate | ||||
| GDNF | Lentiviral-mediated expression | R6/2 (HD) | × | No change in motor phenotype (rotarod, clasping behavior, open field activity); no change in body weight loss rate; no reduction in brain atrophy, neuronal inclusion formation, and cell proliferation in DG | Popovic et al. 2005 [ |
| Neurturin | AAV-mediated expression (4 × 109 vector genomes) | N171-82Q (HD) | ✓ | Improved motor phenotype (rotarod, clasping behavior, gait pattern); reduced neuronal loss | Ramaswamy et al. 2009 [ |
| × | No change in neuronal morphology and aggregate formation; no change in shortened life span | ||||
| NGF | Intrastriatal injection of 6 × 105 MSC cells overexpressing NGF | YAC128 (HD) | ✓ | Improved rotarod and clasping behavior | Dey et al. 2010 [ |
| × | No change in neuronal loss within the striatum | ||||
| VEGF | Overexpression or intracerebroventricular infusion of recombinant Vegf (2.5 μg) | 154Q/2Q (SCA1) | ✓ | Improved rotarod phenotype; increased cerebellar vessel total length and density; increased staining for calbindin | Cvetanovic et al. 2011 [ |
Environmental enrichment-related therapeutic approaches in mouse models of polyQ diseases
| Approach | Model | Therapeutic outcomes | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Environmental enrichment cages (exercise wheels, hiding tubes, and social interaction) | N171-82Q (HD) | ✓ | Improved rotarod performance; attenuated body weight decline | Schilling et al. 2004 [ |
| × | No change in life span | |||
| Environmental enrichment cages (cardboard, paper, and plastic objects) | R6/1 (HD) | ✓ | Delayed “turning task” phenotype and clasping behavior; attenuated peristriatal cerebral atrophy | van Dellen et al. 2000 [ |
| × | No change in body weight loss rate and no significant change in striatal volume; no significant difference in the overall density of inclusions | |||
| Environmental enrichment cages (cardboard boxes, open wooden boxes,cylindrical cardboard tunnels, and folded sheets of paper) | R6/1 (HD) | ✓ | Improved rotarod performance; partially ameliorated body weight loss; increased striatal BDNF level; increased cortical DARPP-32 level | Spires et al. 2004 [ |
| × | No improvement in brain weight loss; no change in striatal DARPP-32 level | |||
| Voluntary physical exercise (running wheels) | R6/1 (HD) | ✓ | Reduced abnormal rearing behavior; delayed rear paw clasping behavior; rescued deficit in spatial working memory; increased striatalmRNA | Pang et al. 2006 [ |
| × | No change in rotarod performance; no change in abnormal BDNF levels | |||
| Environmental enrichment cages (plastic and cardboard objects) | R6/1 (HD) | ✓ | Increased number of BrdU + amd DCX + cells in dentate gyrus; increased length of neuritis; increased DCX + cells migration distance from subgranular zone | Lazic et al. 2006 [ |
| × | No change in the number of BrdU + cells in subventricular zone; no change in rotarod performance | |||
| Environmental enrichment cages (cardboard boxes, plastic conical tubes, cylindrical cardboard tunnels, and folded sheets of paper) | R6/1 (HD) | ✓ | Improved performance on accelerating rotarod rescued abnormal habituation of locomotor activity and exploratory behavior | van Dellen et al. 2008 [ |
| × | No change in body and brain weight loss; no reduction in shrinkage of the striatum and anterior cingulate cortex; no change in density of protein aggregates | |||
| Voluntary physical exercise (running wheels) | R6/1 (HD) | ✓ | Delayed horizontal rod phenotype and clasping phenotype; rescued abnormal habituation of locomotor activity and exploratory behavior | van Dellen et al. 2008 [ |
| × | No change in performance on accelerating rotarod; no change in body and brain weight loss; no reduction in shrinkage of the striatum and anterior cingulate cortex; no change in density of protein aggregates | |||
| Environmental enrichment cages (objects varying in shape, texture and size); more frequent animal handling | R6/1 (HD) | ✓ | Ameliorated deficit in spatial learning on the Barnes maze; increased cortical and hippocampal synaptophysin levels; increased hippocampal PSD-95 level | Nithianantharajah et al. 2008 [ |
| Environmental enrichment cages (novel objects) | R6/1 (HD) | ✓ | Reduced accumulation and size of NII | Benn et al. 2010 [ |
| × | No change in dopamine and adenosine receptor binding levels; no significant environmental enrichment-related changes detectable by microarray; no difference in the level of transgene mRNA expression | |||
| Environmental enrichment cages (cardboard rolls, wire, mesh, shredded paper, wooden, and plastic objects) | R6/1 (HD) | ✓ | Altered methylation pattern at specific sites within CpG islands | Zajac et al. 2010 [ |
| × | No change in hippocampal | |||
| Voluntary physical exercise (running wheels) | R6/1 (HD) | ✓ | Increased hippocampal | Zajac et al. 2010 [ |
| Enhanced diet + mixed housing of TG mice with WT mice | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Decreased body weight loss rate; increased in the survival of the first 50 % of mice to die | Carter et al. 2000 [ |
| Enhanced diet + early weaning and behavioral testing | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Increased in the survival of the first 50 % of mice to die | Carter et al. 2000 [ |
| × | No change in body weight loss rate | |||
| Enhanced diet + involvement in a breeding program | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Increased in the survival of the first 50 % of mice to die | Carter et al. 2000 [ |
| × | Increased body weight loss rate | |||
| Enhanced diet | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Decreased body weight loss rate; prolonged life span; increased hind limb grooming and burrowing | Carter et al. 2000 [ |
| × | No change in open field phenotype | |||
| Minimally enriched living conditions (food pellets on the cage floor + a cardboard tube | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Increased rotarod performance; not significant trend toward increase of the grip strength | Hockly et al. 2002 [ |
| × | No change in body weight loss rate; no change in brain weight loss | |||
| Highly enriched living conditions (larger cages, mixed genotypes, maize fibers, paper strips, cellulose pads, and cotton wool; running wheels and other toys) | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Increased rotarod performance; increased grip strength at endpoint; not significant trend toward increase of the striatal volume; increased peristriatal cerebral volume | Hockly et al. 2002 [ |
| × | No change in body weight loss rate; no change in brain weight loss; no change in striatal and cortical aggregate densities | |||
| Voluntary physical xercise (running wheels) | R6/2 (HD) | × | No change in proliferation of hippocampal cells in R6/2 mice; no change in number of neural precursor cells (DCX+) in the DG of R6/2 mice; no change in the total number of newly generated neurons | Kohl et al. 2007 [ |
| Environmental enrichment cages (playground/no handling) | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Increased activity; prolonged life span | Wood et al. 2010 [ |
| × | No change in overall cognitive performance of R6/2 mice in morris water maze (sex-dependent improvement in some tasks); sex-specific mix of beneficial and detrimental effects on body weight loss | |||
| Environmental enrichment cages (playground/ handling) | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Increased activity | Wood et al. 2010 [ |
| × | No change in overall cognitive performance of R6/2 mice in morris water maze (sex-dependent improvement in some tasks); sex-specific mix of beneficial and detrimental effects on body weight loss; shortened life span (males) | |||
| Motor stimulation (enforced physical exercise on the rotarod) | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Increased rotarod performance (females only) | Wood et al. 2011 [ |
| × | Decreased body weight loss rate; no change in survival; no change in cognitive function (Lashley maze performance) | |||
| Cognitive stimulation (training in the OX maze) | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Increased cognitive function in males (Lashley maze performance); prolonged life span (males); sex-specific mix of beneficial and detrimental effects on body weight loss; increased rotarod performance (females) | Wood et al. 2011 [ |
| Mixed stimulation (access to a playground) | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Increased rotarod performance | Wood et al. 2011 [ |
| × | No change in body weight loss rate; no change in cognitive function (Lashley maze performance); shortened life span (males) |
Fig. 5The therapeutic strategies targeting mitochondrial dysfunction induced by expanded polyQ proteins. By interfering with CREB function, huntingtin downregulates the expression of PGC-1α and induces transcriptional deregulation of nuclear-encoded mitochondrial proteins that are involved in respiration, thermogenesis, and ROS defense. Mutant huntingtin has been proposed to interact with the outer mitochondrial membrane to significantly decrease the mitochondrial Ca2+ capacity and directly induce MPT pore opening. These alterations can cause increased vulnerability to glutamate receptor-mediated excitotoxic stimuli. Finally, mutant huntingtin causes defects in mitochondrial trafficking through long dendritic and axonal projections. Mitochondria-related therapeutic strategies include compensating for energy deficits (1) and oxidative stress (2) caused by mitochondrial dysfunction; restoring the altered transcription of mitochondrial factors (3); inhibiting the mitochondrial permeability transition (4); and administering NMDAR inhibitors to protect against excitotoxicity-mediated cell death (5). PPARγ co-activator-1α (PGC-1α), reactive oxygen species (ROS), mitochondrial permeability transition (MPT)
Therapeutic approaches using CoQ10 in mouse models of polyQ diseases
| Drug | Route/Dose | Model | Therapeutic outcomes | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CoQ10/remacemide | Food supplemented with 0.2 % of CoQ10 (500 mg/kg/day) and 0.007 % of remacemide (17.5 mg/kg/day) | N171-82Q (HD) | ✓ | Improved rotarod performance; decreased body weight loss rate | Schilling et al. 2001 [ |
| × | No change in survival; no change in inclusion formation | ||||
| CoQ10 | Powdered food supplemented with 0.2 % of CoQ10 (500 mg/kg/day) | N171-82Q (HD) | ✓ | Improved rotarod performance | Schilling et al. 2004 [ |
| × | Shortened life span (powdered food formulations effect) | ||||
| CoQ10/remacemide | Food supplemented with 0.2 % of CoQ10 (400 mg/kg/day) and 0.007 % of remacemide (14 mg/kg/day) | N171-82Q (HD) | ✓ | Attenuated body weight loss; prolonged life span | Ferrante et al. 2002 [ |
| CoQ10/remacemide | Food supplemented with 0.2 % of CoQ10 (400 mg/kg/day) and 0.007 % of remacemide (14 mg/kg/day)—separate or combined | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Improved rotarod performance; attenuated body weight loss; prolonged life span; delayed brain weight loss; attenuated gross brain atrophy and ventricular enlargement; attenuated neuronal atrophy; reduced number of striatal aggregates | Ferrante et al. 2002 [ |
| CoQ10 | Food supplemented 1,000, 5,000, 10,000, or 20,000 mg/kg/day (Chemco) | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Prolonged life span (dose dependent); reduced body weight loss; improved rotarod phenotype; increased forelimb strength; attenuated gross brain size decline and striatal atrophy; reduced aggregate formation | Smith et al. 2006 [ |
| CoQ10 | Food supplemented 400, 1,000, and 2,000 mg/kg/day (Tishcon) | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Prolonged life span (dose dependent); reduced body weight loss; improved rotarod phenotype | Smith et al. 2006 [ |
| CoQ10/minocycline | Food supplemented with 0.2 % of CoQ10 and intraperitoneal injection of minocycline (5 mg/kg/day)—separate or combined | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Prolonged life span; improved rotarod phenotype; reduced body weight loss (CoQ10 specific); attenuated gross brain atrophy and ventricular enlargement; attenuated neuronal atrophy; reduced aggregate formation (CoQ10 specific); attenuated the microglial response (minocycline specific) | Stack et al. 2006 [ |
| CoQ10/creatine | Food supplemented with 1 % of CoQ10 and 2 % of creatine—separate or combined | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Improved rotarod performance; prolonged life span | Yang et al. 2009 [ |
| CoQ10 | Food supplemented with 0.2 % of CoQ10 | R6/2 (HD) | × | No change in survival, body weight and rotarod performance; no change in rearing frequency and climbing performance; transient deleterious effects in the open field and grip strength; | Menalled et al. 2010 [ |
| CoQ10 | Food supplemented with 0.6 % of CoQ10 | R6/2 (HD) | × | No change in survival, rotarod performance, grip strength performance, and climbing; transiently decreased body weight, locomotor activity, and rearing in R6/2 | Menalled et al. 2010 [ |
Fig. 6Anti-apoptotic therapeutic strategies target aberrant interactions between polyglutamine proteins and the components of apoptotic pathways. PolyQ proteins cause the upregulation and/or activation of several caspases, upregulate pro-apoptotic proteins and downregulate anti-apoptotic factors, which may subsequently lead to the release of apoptogenic proteins from mitochondria. Several polyQ proteins undergo proteolytic cleavage by caspases, which results in the production of toxic truncated protein fragments. Therapeutic approaches tested in mouse models include the inhibition of caspase functions (1), the inhibition of mitochondrial release of cytochrome c and subsequent intrinsic apoptotic pathway activation (2), and the modulation of the initiation of apoptotic signals (3). Cytochrome c (Cyt c), apoptotic protease activating factor 1 (Apaf-1)
Therapeutic approaches using minocycline in mouse models of polyQ diseases
| Drug | Route/Dose | Model | Therapeutic outcomes | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Minocycline | Intraperitoneal, 5 mg/kg/day | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Prolonged life span; improved rotarod performance | Chen et al. 2000 [ |
| No change in body weight loss rate and blood glucose level; no change in aggregate formation and receptor-binding | |||||
| Minocycline | 1 and 5 mg/mL in drinking water, (~150 and 750 mg/kg/day) | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Reduced elevated glucose levels | Smith et al. 2003 [ |
| No change in body weight loss rate, rotarod performance, and grip strength; no change in aggregate formation; higher dose (10 mg/mL) induced severe initial weight loss | |||||
| Minocycline | Intraperitoneal, 5 mg/kg/day | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Prolonged life span; improved rotarod performance; attenuated gross brain atrophy and ventricular hypertrophy; attenuated striatal neuronal atrophy and microglial response; therapeutic effect increased with the combined minocycline/CoQ10 treatment | Stack et al. 2006 [ |
| × | No change in body weight loss rate and aggregate formation | ||||
| Minocycline | Intraperitoneal, 10 mg/kg/day | N171-82Q (HD) | × | No change in survival and body weight loss rate; no change in rotarod and open field performance; no change in striatal atrophy, ventricle enlargement, and cortical thickness | Mievis et al. 2007 [ |
| Minocycline | Intraperitoneal, 5 mg/kg/day | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Transiently increased body weight, locomotor activity, and rearing (males) | Menalled et al. 2010 [ |
| × | No change in survival, grip strength, rotarod performance, and climbing phenotype; | ||||
| Minocycline | Food supplemented with 0.1 % and 0.375 % of minocycline (~200 and 750 mg/kg/day) | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Transiently increased body weight and rearing (0.1 %); minor and transient beneficial effect on rotarod performance (0.375 %) | Menalled et al. 2010 [ |
| × | Decreased survival (both doses); reduced body weight and rearing (0.375 %); decreased open field activity (0.375 %); no change in grip strength |
Fig. 7Transcriptional deregulation in therapeutic strategies of polyQ diseases. PolyQ tract may influence the binding of polyQ proteins with other protein partners or DNA response elements. Expanded polyQ stretches may interact with or sequester transcription factors leading to the up- or downregulation of many genes. In particular, mutant polyQ proteins abnormally interact with HATs and/or HDACs, which results in the alteration of histone modification patterns and leads to transcriptional activation or inhibition at specific genomic loci. Therapeutic strategies include activation of transcription factors whose activities are reduced by polyQ proteins (1), modulation of transcription factor activity using DNA-binding anthracycline antibiotics (2), and restoration of altered transcription patterns through the modulation of nucleosome dynamics using HDAC inhibitors (3). PolyQ protein with normal polyglutamine stretch (WT), histone acetyltransferase (HAT), histone deacetylase (HDAC), acetyl group (Ac)
Therapeutic approaches using HDAC inhibitors in mouse models of polyQ diseases
| Drug | Route/dose | Model | Therapeutic outcomes | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HDACi 4b | 1 g/L in drinking water, (~150 mg/kg/day) | R6/2300Q (HD) | ✓ | Improved motor phenotype (rotarod performance, clasping phenotype and general locomotion); reduced hunchback posture; attenuated gross brain size decline and striatal atrophy; attenuated body weight decline | Thomas et al. 2008 [ |
| × | No change in aggregate formation | ||||
| Phenylbutyrate | Intraperitoneal (100 mg/kg/day) | N171-82Q (HD) | ✓ | Prolonged life span; attenuated gross brain atrophy, ventricular enlargement, and striatal neuron atrophy; | Gardian et al. 2005 [ |
| × | No change in rotarod performance and aggregate formation | ||||
| SAHA | 0.67 g/L in drinking water, (~100 mg/kg/day) | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Improved rotarod performance; attenuated neuronal atrophy | Hockly et al. 2003 [ |
| × | No change in grip strength, gross brain atrophy, and aggregate formation; increased body weight loss rate | ||||
| SAHA | 0.67 mg/mL in drinking water (~100 mg/kg/day) | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Decreased HDAC 2 and 4 protein levels; decreased HDAC 7 and 11 mRNA levels; restored cortical BDNF mRNA level; reduced cortical aggregate load | Mielcarek et al. 2011 [ |
| Sodium butyrate | 4 and 8 g/L in drinking water (~800–900 mg/kg/day) | AR-97Q (SBMA) | ✓ | Improved motor phenotype (rotarod, cage activity, gait pattern); ameliorated muscle atrophy and body posture; decreased body weight loss rate; prolonged life span; improved motor neurons and muscle cells morphology | Minamiyama et al. 2004 [ |
| × | No change in aggregate formation and nuclear localization of mutant AR; higher doses (16 and 40 g/L) accelerated the disease onset | ||||
| Sodium butyrate | Intraperitoneal (400 or 800 mg/kg/day) | Ataxin-3-Q79 (SCA3) | ✓ | Improved rotarod phenotype and gait pattern; reversed reduction of locomotor activity; improved Purkinje cell morphology; decreased body weight loss rate; prolonged life span; reduced pelvic elevation and abnormal hunchback posture | Chou et al. 2011 [ |
| Sodium butyrate | Intraperitoneal (0.5 and 1.5 mg/kg/day) | Atro 118Q (DRPLA) | ✓ | Improved motor phenotype (rotarod and grip strength); prolonged life span | Ying et al. 2006 [ |
| × | No change in aggregate formation and nuclear localization of mutant atrophin; no change in somal size of neurons in dentate cerebellar nucleus | ||||
| Sodium butyrate | Intraperitoneal (200, 400, 600, 1,200 mg/kg/day) | R6/2 (HD) | ✓ | Prolonged life span; improved rotarod performance; increased brain weight; attenuated gross brain atrophy; reduced striatal neuron atrophy | Ferrante et al. 2003 [ |
| × | No treatment related reduction of body weight loss; no significant reduction in huntingtin-positive striatal aggregates | ||||
| Sodium valproate | Intraperitoneal (100 mg/kg/day) | N171-82Q (HD) | ✓ | Prolonged life span; improved open field activity | Zádori et al. 2009 [ |
| × | No changes in the striatal dopamine, DOPAC, or HVA levels |
Fig. 8The diagram demonstrates the use of various mouse models in polyglutamine disease therapeutic approaches. The vast majority of these approaches were performed on four Huntington disease models: YAC128, N171‐82Q, R6/1, and R6/2. Overall, Huntington disease animals were used in studies of nearly 90 % of therapeutic approaches (243 of 280). The remaining studies utilized mouse models of SBMA (11 approaches were tested in the AR97Q model and one was tested in the 112Q model), SCA1 (six approaches in the B05 and eight in the 154Q/2Q models), SCA3 (four approaches were tested in four different models—polyQ69, MJD84.2, 70.61CAG, and Q79), and SCA7 (two approaches were tested in the 90QR7E model). In addition, the SCA2 58Q, DRPLA 118Q, and Sca17 L7-hTBP models were also used for experimental therapy
Summarizes the suitability of the mouse models of HD for the evaluation of experimental therapies
| N171-82Q | R6/1 | R6/2 | YAC128 | YAC72 | CAG140 | Q111 | BACHD | HD190QG | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Construct validity—genetic similarity to the human patients (full-length protein/natural promoter/targeted transgene integration) | −/−/− | −/+/− | −/+/− | +h/+/− | +h/+/− | +hb/+/+ | +hb/+/+ | +h/+/− | −/+/− |
| Face validity—phenotypic similarity to the human patients (specific cell loss/rotarod impairment/ cognitive alterations) | +/+/− | −/+/+ | −/+/+ | +/+/+ | −/+/− | +/+/+ | −/+/− | −/+/− | −/−/− |
| Number of therapeutic approaches published | 42 | 30 | 139 | 21 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 5 | 2 |
| Number of phenotypes identified | 64 | 71 | 170 | 51 | 12 | 44 | 15 | 23 | 11 |
| Phenotype progression (AD50; age at 50 % detected phenotypes) | 13 | 16 | 8 | 35 | 41 | 30 | 66 | 17 | 8 |
| Breeding and husbandry (severe phenotype/reduced fertility) | +/nr | nr | +/+ | nr | nr | nr | nr | nr | +/nr |
This suitability can be evaluated by using construct validity (genetic similarities), face validity (phenotypic similarities), and predictive validity (cannot be determined at present). Moreover, this suitability can be assessed by the number of therapeutic approaches published (based on the data table) and the number of phenotypes identified (based on the data table in part I of the review). Additionally, the AD50 parameter (expressed as the number of weeks) reflects the disease dynamic in the models (see review part I for detailed information). The separate issue in assessing the therapeutic suitability in mouse models is the model maintenance and breeding
h human sequence, hb hybrid human/mouse sequence, nr not reported, ret 90Q R7E phenotype is limited to the eye retina
Summarizes the suitability of other polyQ diseases for the evaluation of experimental therapies
| SCA1 B05 | SCA1 154Q/2Q | SCA2 58Q | SCA3 polyQ69 | SCA3 MJD84.2 | SCA3 70.61 CAG | SCA3 Q79 | SCA7 90Q R7E | SCA17 L7-hTBP | SBMA AR-97Q | SBMA 112Q | DRPLA Atro 118Q | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Construct validity—genetic similarity to the human patients (full length protein/natural promoter/targeted transgene integration) | +h/−/− | +hb/+/+ | +h/−/− | −/−/− | +h/+/− | +h/−/− | +h/−/− | +h/−/− | +/−/− | +h/−/− | +/−/− | +h/−/− |
| Face validity—phenotypic similarity to the human patients (specific cell loss/rotarod impairment/ cognitive alterations) | +/+/+ | +/+/+ | +/+/− | −/+/− | +/+/− | −/+/− | −/+/− | −/−/− (ret) | +/+/− | −/+/− | +/+/+ | −/+/− |
| Number of therapeutic approaches published | 6 | 8 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 11 | 1 | 1 |
| Number of phenotypes identified | 18 | 27 | 10 | 12 | 36 | 18 | 17 | 14 | 24 | 25 | 23 | 19 |
| Phenotype progression (AD50; age at 50 % detected phenotypes) | 10 | 19.5 | 25 | 3 | 41 | 13 | 30 | 3.25 | 13 | 10.5 | 30 | 11.5 |
| Breeding and husbandry (severe phenotype/reduced fertility) | +/nr | +/nr | nr | +/nr | nr | +/nr | nr | nr | +/nr | +/nr | −/+ | +/nr |
This suitability can be evaluated by using construct validity (genetic similarities), face validity (phenotypic similarities), and predictive validity (cannot be determined at present). Moreover, this suitability can be assessed by the number of therapeutic approaches published (based on the data table) and the number of phenotypes identified (based on the data table in part I of the review). Additionally, the AD50 parameter (expressed as the number of weeks) reflects the disease dynamic in the models (see review part I for detailed information). The separate issue in assessing the therapeutic suitability in mouse models is the model maintenance and breeding
h human sequence, hb hybrid human/mouse sequence, nr not reported, ret 90Q R7E phenotype is limited to the eye retina
Phenotypes commonly used as therapeutic outcome indicators
| N171-82Q | R6/1 | R6/2 | YAC 128 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brain atrophy | 39 % | 22 % | 39 % |
|
| Cell loss | 20 % | 7 % | 4 % |
|
| PolyQ aggregates | 48 % | 40 % |
| 26 % |
| Brain weight | 5 % | 30 % | 17 % | 37 % |
| Rotarod test |
|
|
|
|
| Stride abnormalities | 22 % | 18 % | 20 % | 32 % |
| Locomotor impairment | 10 % | 19 % | 32 % | 26 % |
| Grip strength | 7 % | 4 % | 13 % | 5 % |
| Clasping | 10 % | 40 % | 24 % | 16 % |
| Learning deficits | 2 % | 15 % | 13 % | 26 % |
| Premature death |
| 4 % |
| 0 % |
| Body weight loss |
|
|
| 12 % |
Table 9 demonstrates how frequently a certain phenotype is tested to reveal the therapeutic outcome. This indirectly indicates the detectability and usefulness of a given phenotype in mice as a potent marker of a therapeutic intervention. Note that when a particular phenotype was tested in an individual therapeutic approach several times (e.g., using different methods), it was counted in the table only once. Phenotypes that were frequently selected as therapeutic intervention markers (in more than 50 % of the approaches) are marked in bold