Study suggests new treatments for
Huntington's disease
Public release date: 9-Jan-2008
The researchers include Eliana Romero, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston,
TX, USA; Guang-Ho Cha, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA; Patrik
Verstreken, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA; Howard Hughes Medical
Institute, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA; Baylor College of Medicine,
Houston, TX, USA; Cindy V. Ly, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA;
Robert E. Hughes, Buck Institute, Novato, CA, USA; Hugo J. Bellen, Baylor College
of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA, and Howard Hughes Medical Institute; and Juan
Botas, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA.
Working with fruit flies, researchers have discovered a new mechanism by which
the abnormal protein in Huntington’s disease causes neurodegeneration.
They have also manipulated the flies to successfully suppress that neurodegeneration,
which they said suggests potential treatments to delay the onset and progression
of the disease in humans.
Juan Botas and colleagues published their findings in the January 10, 2008,
issue of the journal Neuron, published by Cell Press.
Huntington’s disease is caused by a mutation in the gene for the huntingtin
protein (htt) that causes a genetic “stutter”—an abnormally
long number of repeats of the amino acid glutamine at one end of the protein.
Previous studies had concentrated on the toxicity that the abnormal protein
produces by forming cell-clogging aggregates in the nuclei of neurons. Most
studies in animals, however, had not involved introducing the gene for full-length
htt; they involved only a fragment.
In their experiments, Botas and colleagues introduced the gene for full-length
abnormal human htt into the fruit fly Drosophila and studied its early effects
on neural function in the flies.
They found that, before the abnormal protein produced any toxic effects in the
nuclei of neurons, it caused abnormally high transmission of chemical signals,
called neurotransmitters, among neurons. Such neurotransmitters are launched
by one neuron across connections, called synapses, to its neighbor, triggering
a nerve impulse in the receiving neuron. Besides abnormal synaptic transmission,
the researchers also found that mutant htt caused neurodegeneration and degeneration
in the flies’ motor ability.
The researchers found that they could suppress these abnormalities by introducing
other mutations into the fly genome that either reduced neurotransmission or
reduced the activity of pores called calcium channels in the membranes of neurons.
Such channels trigger neurotransmission by controlling the influx of calcium
into neurons.
“The findings described in this report unveil a mechanism of pathogenesis
for expanded htt that does not require its nuclear accumulation in detectable
amounts,” concluded the researchers. They wrote that the increased neurotransmission
they detected “likely represents a mechanism of pathogenesis taking place
at early stages of disease progression.
“These findings point to increased synaptic transmission as a therapeutic
target with the potential of delaying [Huntington’s disease] onset and
thus likely impacting disease progression,” they wrote. They concluded
that their ability to genetically suppress the abnormal neurotransmission and
neurodegeneration “further define[s] specific therapeutic targets and
support[s] the idea that Ca2+ channel antagonists, and perhaps other inhibitors
of neurotransmission, offer an attractive therapeutic option due to their specificity
and wide usage.”
Source: Cell Press Contact: Cathleen Genova
Potential New Treatments For Huntington's Disease
Article Date: 10 Jan 2008 - 3:00 PST