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Publication : Polyglutamine expansion down-regulates specific neuronal genes before pathologic changes in SCA1.

First Author  Lin X Year  2000
Journal  Nat Neurosci Volume  3
Issue  2 Pages  157-63
PubMed ID  10649571 Mgi Jnum  J:60194
Mgi Id  MGI:1352959 Doi  10.1038/72101
Citation  Lin X, et al. (2000) Polyglutamine expansion down-regulates specific neuronal genes before pathologic changes in SCA1 [see comments]. Nat Neurosci 3(2):157-63
abstractText  The expansion of an unstable CAG repeat causes spinocerebellar ataxia type 1 (SCA1) and several other neurodegenerative diseases. How polyglutamine expansions render the resulting proteins toxic to neurons, however, remains elusive. Hypothesizing that long polyglutamine tracts alter gene expression, we found certain neuronal genes involved in signal transduction and calcium homeostasis sequentially downregulated in SCA1 mice. These genes were abundant in Purkinje cells, the primary site of SCA1 pathogenesis; moreover, their downregulation was mediated by expanded ataxin-1 and occurred before detectable pathology. Similar downregulation occurred in SCA1 human tissues. Altered gene expression may be the earliest mediator of polyglutamine toxicity.
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