HD Genetics - Cormier Flashcards

1
Q

Why is HD actually a good target for possible future genetic therapy?

A

One single cause in ALL patients!

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2
Q

What is the penetrance of HD?

A

100% with anyone having over 40 CAG repeats!

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3
Q

How is the number of polyQ related to severity?

A

Directly relatedunder 35 normal
36-41 incomplete penetrance
40-60 adult onset
60+ juvenile onset

Severity also increases with earlier onset

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4
Q

Does ApoE allele have any connection?

A

Yes.
E4 = protective
E2/3 = lowers age of onset

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5
Q

Does gender affect anything?

A

Inheriting the disease from the father actually increases the severity and lowers age of onset

Males just have a higher gamete mutation rate than women

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6
Q

Can you do anything behaviorally to change your risk?

A

omega 3 = protective (fish)
Omega 6 = hurts (red meat)

Intellectual stimulation = protective

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7
Q

Why does the HTT protein cause problems as a PolyQ mutant?

A
  • The HTT protein is a substrate for protease cleavage
  • Expanded polyQ in exon 1 enhances the rate of cleavage at a nearby site
  • Cleaved wildtype HTT would be degrade in the cytoplasm
  • Cleaved mutant HTT actually goes to the nucleus where it is trapped and forms protein aggregates
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8
Q

Are nuclear inclusions pathogenic or protective?

A

Not understood currently

Could be either

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9
Q

Main cellular mechanism of neurotoxicity from HD?

A

(1) dysregulation of transcription caused by toxic nuclear aggregates
(2) altered neurotransmitters & excitotoxicity
(3) interference with wildtype Htt: changes in axonal transport & synaptic function
- apoptosis
- oxidative stress related to mitochondrial dysfunction

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10
Q

2 ways that huntingtin can dysregulate normal transcription?

A

Can trap various trasncription factors

Can inhibit histone acetylase and repress transcription

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11
Q

Where along the corticostriatal pathway might dysfunction cause the excitotoxicity contributing to HD?

A
  • Increased Glu release from afferent
  • Reduced uptake of Glu by glial cells
  • Hypersensitivity of Post-synaptic NMDA receptors
  • Altered Ca homeostasis
  • Mitochondrial dysfunction in postsynaptic cell
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12
Q

Why would the simple interference of wild-type HTT contribute to HD?

A

WT
-involved in many neuronal functions
(vesicle trans., endocytosis, synpase fucntions.)
-anti-apoptotic

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13
Q

How does oxidative stress occur in HD?

What does it do?

A
  • Excitotoxicity causes large amounts of intracellular Ca to be released
  • This interferes with mitochondrial function
  • Cytochrome C/Caspase cascade activated!
  • Cell death!
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