HD Genetics - Cormier Flashcards
Why is HD actually a good target for possible future genetic therapy?
One single cause in ALL patients!
What is the penetrance of HD?
100% with anyone having over 40 CAG repeats!
How is the number of polyQ related to severity?
Directly relatedunder 35 normal
36-41 incomplete penetrance
40-60 adult onset
60+ juvenile onset
Severity also increases with earlier onset
Does ApoE allele have any connection?
Yes.
E4 = protective
E2/3 = lowers age of onset
Does gender affect anything?
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
Can you do anything behaviorally to change your risk?
omega 3 = protective (fish)
Omega 6 = hurts (red meat)
Intellectual stimulation = protective
Why does the HTT protein cause problems as a PolyQ mutant?
- 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
Are nuclear inclusions pathogenic or protective?
Not understood currently
Could be either
Main cellular mechanism of neurotoxicity from HD?
(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
2 ways that huntingtin can dysregulate normal transcription?
Can trap various trasncription factors
Can inhibit histone acetylase and repress transcription
Where along the corticostriatal pathway might dysfunction cause the excitotoxicity contributing to HD?
- 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
Why would the simple interference of wild-type HTT contribute to HD?
WT
-involved in many neuronal functions
(vesicle trans., endocytosis, synpase fucntions.)
-anti-apoptotic
How does oxidative stress occur in HD?
What does it do?
- Excitotoxicity causes large amounts of intracellular Ca to be released
- This interferes with mitochondrial function
- Cytochrome C/Caspase cascade activated!
- Cell death!