Huntington's disease is caused by an expanded polyglutamine tract in huntingtin protein, leading to accumulation of huntingtin in the nuclei of striatal neurons. The 18 amino-acid amino-terminus of huntingtin is an amphipathic alpha helical membrane-binding domain that can reversibly target to vesicles and the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). The association of huntingtin to the ER is affected by ER stress. A single point mutation in huntingtin 1-18 predicted to disrupt this helical structure displayed striking phenotypes of complete inhibition of polyglutamine-mediated aggregation, increased huntingtin nuclear accumulation and greatly increased mutant huntingtin toxicity in a striatal-derived mouse cell line. Huntingtin vesicular interaction mediated by 1-18 is specific to late endosomes and autophagic vesicles. We propose that huntingtin has a normal biological function as an ER-associated protein that can translocate to the nucleus and back out in response to ER stress or other events. The increased nuclear entry of mutant huntingtin due to loss of ER-targeting results in increased toxicity.
Two serine residues within the first 17 amino acid residues of huntingtin (N17) are crucial for modulation of mutant huntingtin toxicity in cell and mouse genetic models of Huntington's disease. Here we show that the stress-dependent phosphorylation of huntingtin at Ser13 and Ser16 affects N17 conformation and targets full-length huntingtin to chromatin-dependent subregions of the nucleus, the mitotic spindle and cleavage furrow during cell division. Polyglutamine-expanded mutant huntingtin is hypophosphorylated in N17 in both homozygous and heterozygous cell contexts. By high-content screening in live cells, we identified kinase inhibitors that modulated N17 phosphorylation and hence huntingtin subcellular localization. N17 phosphorylation was reduced by casein kinase-2 inhibitors. Paradoxically, IKKβ kinase inhibition increased N17 phosphorylation, affecting huntingtin nuclear and subnuclear localization. These data indicate that huntingtin phosphorylation at Ser13 and Ser16 can be modulated by small-molecule drugs, which may have therapeutic potential in Huntington's disease.
Huntington disease (HD) is a progressive neurodegenerative monogenic disorder caused by expansion of a polyglutamine stretch in the huntingtin (Htt) protein. Mutant huntingtin triggers neural dysfunction and death, mainly in the corpus striatum and cerebral cortex, resulting in pathognomonic motor symptoms, as well as cognitive and psychiatric decline. Currently, there is no effective treatment for HD. We report that intraventricular infusion of ganglioside GM1 induces phosphorylation of mutant huntingtin at specific serine amino acid residues that attenuate huntingtin toxicity, and restores normal motor function in already symptomatic HD mice. Thus, our studies have identified a potential therapy for HD that targets a posttranslational modification of mutant huntingtin with critical effects on disease pathogenesis.H untington disease (HD) is an inherited neurodegenerative monogenic disorder caused by the expansion of a polyglutamine stretch beyond 36 residues in the amino-terminal domain of huntingtin (Htt), a protein expressed in most tissues and cells. The mutation causes huntingtin to acquire toxic conformation/s and to affect neuronal function and viability. Medium-sized spiny neurons in the corpus striatum are most affected, but neurodegeneration also occurs in the cerebral cortex and, to a minor extent, in other brain areas, resulting in motor and psychiatric symptoms, as well as cognitive decline.The cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying HD pathogenesis are complex. Both loss and gain of function of mutant huntingtin contribute to cause a wide array of neuronal dysfunctions affecting cell signaling, gene transcription, axonal transport, cell and mitochondrial metabolism as well as neurotransmission (1).In recent years, a breakthrough in HD research has been the discovery that posttranslational modifications of mutant Htt are crucial modulators of mutant Htt toxicity (2-4). Phosphorylation at various serine residues prevents cleavage of mutant huntingtin into more toxic fragments, decreases neural cell death in vitro (5-10), and/or restores Htt functions that are compromised by the mutation (8, 11). The most dramatic effects have been described for huntingtin phosphorylation at serine 13 and serine 16. These two amino acid residues are part of the highly conserved amino-terminal "N17" domain of huntingtin, a domain that regulates huntingtin intracellular localization and association to cellular membranes (12, 13), as well as kinetics of mutant huntingtin aggregation (14,15). Phosphomimetic mutations of serine 13 and serine 16 by aspartic or glutamic acid substitution (S13D and S16D or S13E and S16E) decrease the toxicity of mutant huntingtin fragments in vitro (10, 16). In line with these studies, expression of a phosphomimetic (S13D and S16D) mutant form of expanded full-length huntingtin in a BACHD transgenic mouse model was shown to result in a normal phenotype, with no detectable signs of HD pathology by 12 mo (17).These findings suggest that pharmacological interventions that modulate cell sig...
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