Mutant Huntingtin Impairs Axonal Trafficking in Mammalian Neurons In Vivo and In Vitro

Eugenia Trushina, Roy B. Dyer, John D. Badger, Daren Ure(Institute of Neuroimmunology of the Slovak Academy of Sciences), Lars Eide(Oslo University Hospital), David Tran(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Brent T. Vrieze, Valérie Legendre‐Guillemin(Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital), Peter S. McPherson(Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital), Bhaskar S. Mandavilli(National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences), Bennett Van Houten(National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences), Scott Zeitlin(University of Virginia), Mark A. McNiven, Ruedi Aebersold(Institute for Systems Biology), Michael R. Hayden(University of British Columbia), Joseph E. Parisi(Mayo Clinic), Erling Seeberg(University of Oslo), Ioannis Dragatsis(University of Tennessee Health Science Center), Kelly Doyle, Anna M. Bender, Celin Chacko, Cynthia T. McMurray(Mayo Clinic in Arizona)
Molecular and Cellular Biology
August 31, 2004
Cited by 506Open Access
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Abstract

Recent data in invertebrates demonstrated that huntingtin (htt) is essential for fast axonal trafficking. Here, we provide direct and functional evidence that htt is involved in fast axonal trafficking in mammals. Moreover, expression of full-length mutant htt (mhtt) impairs vesicular and mitochondrial trafficking in mammalian neurons in vitro and in whole animals in vivo. Particularly, mitochondria become progressively immobilized and stop more frequently in neurons from transgenic animals. These defects occurred early in development prior to the onset of measurable neurological or mitochondrial abnormalities. Consistent with a progressive loss of function, wild-type htt, trafficking motors, and mitochondrial components were selectively sequestered by mhtt in human Huntington's disease-affected brain. Data provide a model for how loss of htt function causes toxicity; mhtt-mediated aggregation sequesters htt and components of trafficking machinery leading to loss of mitochondrial motility and eventual mitochondrial dysfunction.


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