| Literature DB >> 30450032 |
Jenny Sassone1, Elsa Papadimitriou2, Dimitra Thomaidou2.
Abstract
Huntington's Disease (HD) is a neurodegenerative disorder caused by a CAG expansion in the exon-1 of the IT15 gene encoding the protein Huntingtin. Expression of mutated Huntingtin in humans leads to dysfunction and ultimately degeneration of selected neuronal populations of the striatum and cerebral cortex. Current available HD therapy relies on drugs to treat chorea and control psychiatric symptoms, however, no therapy has been proven to slow down disease progression or prevent disease onset. Thus, although 24 years have passed since HD gene identification, HD remains a relentless progressive disease characterized by cognitive dysfunction and motor disability that leads to death of the majority of patients, on average 10-20 years after its onset. Up to now several molecular pathways have been implicated in the process of neurodegeneration involved in HD and have provided potential therapeutic targets. Based on these data, approaches currently under investigation for HD therapy aim on the one hand at getting insight into the mechanisms of disease progression in a human-based context and on the other hand at silencing mHTT expression by using antisense oligonucleotides. An innovative and still poorly investigated approach is to identify new factors that increase neurogenesis and/or induce reprogramming of endogenous neuroblasts and parenchymal astrocytes to generate new healthy neurons to replace lost ones and/or enforce neuroprotection of pre-existent striatal and cortical neurons. Here, we review studies that use human disease-in-a-dish models to recapitulate HD pathogenesis or are focused on promoting in vivo neurogenesis of endogenous striatal neuroblasts and direct neuronal reprogramming of parenchymal astrocytes, which combined with neuroprotective protocols bear the potential to re-establish brain homeostasis lost in HD.Entities:
Keywords: Huntington’s disease; direct reprogramming; iPCs; in vivo reprogramming; miRNAs; neuroprotection
Year: 2018 PMID: 30450032 PMCID: PMC6224350 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2018.00800
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
FIGURE 1Study of HD pathogenesis and possible therapeutic approaches in humans. (A) iPSC technology has made it possible to generate in vitro brain organoids or subtype specific neuronal populations related to HD, such as MSNs, from HD patients’ fibroblasts, thus enabling the study of the neurodevelopmental aspects of HD, as well as drug screening. Direct reprogramming of patients’ fibroblasts to induced-MSNs (iMSNs) facilitated the study of late onset HD pathogenesis, since iMSNs retain age-related signatures. (B) In vivo regenerative approaches as possible therapeutic strategies, including transplantation of iMSNs or direct reprogramming of resident glial cells into induced neurons in the striatum, remain to be further explored. On the other hand, neuroprotective approaches have been more extensively explored aiming either at targeting REST complex activity, or at the restoration of BDNF levels, lipid metabolic pathways or mitochondrial function.