Proteolysis of Mutant Huntingtin Produces an Exon 1 Fragment That Accumulates as an Aggregated Protein in Neuronal Nuclei in Huntington Disease

Christian Landles(King's College London), Kirupa Sathasivam(King's College London), Andreas Weiss(Novartis (Switzerland)), Ben Woodman(King's College London), Hilary Moffitt(King's College London), Steven Finkbeiner(Gladstone Institutes), Banghua Sun(Amgen (United States)), Juliette Gafni(Buck Institute for Research on Aging), Lisa Ellerby(Buck Institute for Research on Aging), Yvon Trottier(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), William G. Richards(Amgen (United States)), Alex Osmand(University of Tennessee at Knoxville), Paolo Paganetti(Novartis (Switzerland)), Gillian P. Bates(King's College London)
Journal of Biological Chemistry
January 20, 2010
Cited by 339Open Access
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Abstract

Huntingtin proteolysis has been implicated in the molecular pathogenesis of Huntington disease (HD). Despite an intense effort, the identity of the pathogenic smallest N-terminal fragment has not been determined. Using a panel of anti-huntingtin antibodies, we employed an unbiased approach to generate proteolytic cleavage maps of mutant and wild-type huntingtin in the HdhQ150 knock-in mouse model of HD. We identified 14 prominent N-terminal fragments, which, in addition to the full-length protein, can be readily detected in cytoplasmic but not nuclear fractions. These fragments were detected at all ages and are not a consequence of the pathogenic process. We demonstrated that the smallest fragment is an exon 1 huntingtin protein, known to contain a potent nuclear export signal. Prior to the onset of behavioral phenotypes, the exon 1 protein, and possibly other small fragments, accumulate in neuronal nuclei in the form of a detergent insoluble complex, visualized as diffuse granular nuclear staining in tissue sections. This methodology can be used to validate the inhibition of specific proteases as therapeutic targets for HD by pharmacological or genetic approaches.


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