untington disease (HD; OMIM 613004) is a rare genetic neurodegenerative disease characterized by a triad of cognitive, behavioral, and motor symptoms. [1][2][3] Disease onset typically occurs in the prime of life, between ages 30 and 50 years, and is associated with increasing disability, worsening of function, and loss of independence, leading to death within approximately 15 years, on average, after the onset of motor signs and symptoms. 2,4 A cytosine-adenine-guanine (CAG) repeat expansion variant (mutation) in only 1 of the 2 alleles of the huntingtin gene, HTT (OMIM 613004), is sufficient to be associated with the onset of HD with an autosomal-dominant pattern of inheritance. 5 The expansion variation on the affected allele is encoded for an abnormally long polyglutamine tract within the huntingtin protein (HTT), resulting in the formation of variant HTT. 1,6,7 The expression of variant HTT throughout the brain is associated with progressive agedependent neurodegeneration, primarily owing to toxic gain-of-function mechanisms. 1,8,9 Strategies to decrease or suppress the production of variant HTT are in clinical development, with the ultimate goal of stopping or slowing clinical progression of the affected cognitive, behavioral, and motor domains. 1,7 These strategies include antisense oligonucleotide (ASO)-mediated HTTlowering approaches, which target the RNA product of either the variant HTT allele or both HTT alleles (the variant HTT and the unaffected and unexpanded or wild-type HTT allele) as well as adenoassociated viral (AAV) vector-delivered short interfering RNA (siRNA) or microRNA (miRNA) HTT-lowering approaches, which target the products of both HTT alleles.This review examines all available evidence from the relevant published human and animal literature to assess the potential benefits and risks of HTT-lowering therapeutic strategies in clinical development for the treatment of HD (Figure ). 2,[10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24][25][26][27][28] The huntingtin protein is large and ubiquitously expressed (3144 amino Huntington disease (HD) is caused by a cytosine-adenine-guanine trinucleotide repeat expansion in the huntingtin gene, HTT, that results in expression of variant (mutant) huntingtin protein (HTT). Therapeutic strategies that reduce HTT levels are currently being pursued to slow or stop disease progression in people with HD. These approaches are supported by robust preclinical data indicating that reducing variant huntingtin protein is associated with decreased HD pathology. However, the risk-benefit profile of reducing either variant HTT or both variant and wild-type HTT is currently an open question that is being addressed in ongoing clinical trials. This review aims to examine the current data available regarding altered HTT in humans, normal animals, and animal models of HD. Studies indexed in PubMed were searched using the MeSH term Huntington disease or the text words huntington or huntingtin from August 31, 1999, to August 31, 2019, with no language restri...