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Publication : Postnatal and adult consequences of loss of huntingtin during development: Implications for Huntington's disease.

First Author  Arteaga-Bracho EE Year  2016
Journal  Neurobiol Dis Volume  96
Pages  144-155 PubMed ID  27623015
Mgi Jnum  J:260244 Mgi Id  MGI:6140739
Doi  10.1016/j.nbd.2016.09.006 Citation  Arteaga-Bracho EE, et al. (2016) Postnatal and adult consequences of loss of huntingtin during development: Implications for Huntington's disease. Neurobiol Dis 96:144-155
abstractText  The mutation in huntingtin (mHtt) leads to a spectrum of impairments in the developing forebrain of Huntington''s disease (HD) mouse models. Whether these developmental alterations are due to loss- or gain-of-function mechanisms and contribute to HD pathogenesis is unknown. We examined the role of selective loss of huntingtin (Htt) function during development on postnatal vulnerability to cell death. We employed mice expressing very low levels of Htt throughout embryonic life to postnatal day 21 (Hdh(d*hyp)). We demonstrated that Hdh(d*hyp) mice exhibit: (1) late-life striatal and cortical neuronal degeneration; (2) neurological and skeletal muscle alterations; and (3) white matter tract impairments and axonal degeneration. Hdh(d*hyp) embryos also exhibited subpallial heterotopias, aberrant striatal maturation and deregulation of gliogenesis. These results indicate that developmental deficits associated with Htt functions render cells present at discrete neural foci increasingly susceptible to cell death, thus implying the potential existence of a loss-of-function developmental component to HD pathogenesis.
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