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Publication : Developmental defects in Huntington's disease show that axonal growth and microtubule reorganization require NUMA1.

First Author  Capizzi M Year  2022
Journal  Neuron Volume  110
Issue  1 Pages  36-50.e5
PubMed ID  34793694 Mgi Jnum  J:322642
Mgi Id  MGI:6877240 Doi  10.1016/j.neuron.2021.10.033
Citation  Capizzi M, et al. (2022) Developmental defects in Huntington's disease show that axonal growth and microtubule reorganization require NUMA1. Neuron 110(1):36-50.e5
abstractText  Although the classic symptoms of Huntington's disease (HD) manifest in adulthood, neural progenitor cell behavior is already abnormal by 13 weeks' gestation. To determine how these developmental defects evolve, we turned to cell and mouse models. We found that layer II/III neurons that normally connect the hemispheres are limited in their growth in HD by microtubule bundling defects within the axonal growth cone, so that fewer axons cross the corpus callosum. Proteomic analyses of the growth cones revealed that NUMA1 (nuclear/mitotic apparatus protein 1) is downregulated in HD by miR-124. Suppressing NUMA1 in wild-type cells recapitulates the microtubule and axonal growth defects of HD, whereas raising NUMA1 levels with antagomiR-124 or stabilizing microtubules with epothilone B restores microtubule organization and rescues axonal growth. NUMA1 therefore regulates the microtubule network in the growth cone, and HD, which is traditionally conceived as a disease of intracellular trafficking, also disturbs the cytoskeletal network.
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