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Publication : A huntingtin-mediated fast stress response halting endosomal trafficking is defective in Huntington's disease.

First Author  Nath S Year  2015
Journal  Hum Mol Genet Volume  24
Issue  2 Pages  450-62
PubMed ID  25205111 Mgi Jnum  J:217211
Mgi Id  MGI:5613315 Doi  10.1093/hmg/ddu460
Citation  Nath S, et al. (2015) A huntingtin-mediated fast stress response halting endosomal trafficking is defective in Huntington's disease. Hum Mol Genet 24(2):450-62
abstractText  Cellular stress is a normal part of the aging process and is especially relevant in neurodegenerative disease. Canonical stress responses, such as the heat shock response, activate following exposure to stress and restore proteostasis through the action of isomerases and chaperones within the cytosol. Through live-cell imaging, we demonstrate involvement of the Huntington's disease (HD) protein, huntingtin, in a rapid cell stress response that lies temporally upstream of canonical stress responses. This response is characterized by the formation of distinct cytosolic puncta and reversible localization of huntingtin to early endosomes. The formation of these puncta, which we have termed huntingtin stress bodies (HSBs), is associated with arrest of early-to-recycling and early-to-late endosomal trafficking. The critical domains for this response have been mapped to two regions of huntingtin flanking the polyglutamine tract, and we observe polyglutamine-expanded huntingtin-expressing cells to be defective in their ability to recover from this stress response. We propose that HSB formation rapidly diverts high ATP use from vesicular trafficking during stress, thus mobilizing canonical stress responses without relying on increased energy metabolism, and that restoration from this response is defective in HD.
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