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Distinct aggregation and cell death patterns among different types of primary neurons induced by mutant huntingtin protein
- Source :
- Journal of Neurochemistry. 89:974-987
- Publication Year :
- 2004
- Publisher :
- Wiley, 2004.
-
Abstract
- Aggregation of disease proteins is believed to be a central event in the pathology of polyglutamine diseases, whereas the relationship between aggregation and neuronal death remains controversial. We investigated this question by expressing mutant huntingtin (htt) with a defective adenovirus in different types of neurons prepared from rat cerebral cortex, striatum or cerebellum. The distribution pattern of inclusions is not identical among different types of primary neurons. On day 2 after infection, cytoplasmic inclusions are dominant in cortical and striatal neurons, whereas at day 4 the ratio of nuclear inclusions overtakes that of cytoplasmic inclusions. Meanwhile, nuclear inclusions are always predominantly present in cerebellar neurons. The percentage of inclusion-positive cells is highest in cerebellar neurons, whereas mutant htt induces cell death most remarkably in cortical neurons. As our system uses htt exon 1 protein and thus aggregation occurs independently from cleavage of the full-length htt, our observations indicate that the aggregation process is distinct among different neurons. Most of the neurons containing intracellular (either nuclear or cytoplasmic) aggregates are viable. Our findings suggest that the process of mutant htt aggregation rather than the resulting inclusion body is critical for neuronal cell death.
- Subjects :
- Cytoplasm
Programmed cell death
Cerebellum
Time Factors
Huntingtin
Cytoplasmic inclusion
Blotting, Western
Gene Expression
Nerve Tissue Proteins
Biology
Transfection
Biochemistry
Adenoviridae
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience
medicine
Huntingtin Protein
Animals
Humans
Rats, Wistar
Cells, Cultured
Cell Nucleus
Cerebral Cortex
Inclusion Bodies
Neurons
Cell Death
Neurodegeneration
Nuclear Proteins
Exons
medicine.disease
Peptide Fragments
Rats
Cell biology
Neostriatum
medicine.anatomical_structure
nervous system
Cerebral cortex
Neuron
Trinucleotide Repeat Expansion
Neuroscience
HeLa Cells
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14714159 and 00223042
- Volume :
- 89
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Neurochemistry
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....1a823719041ef604853b1f0aa1147886
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1471-4159.2004.02372.x