Cell-intrinsic glial pathology is conserved across human and murine models of Huntington’s disease

Glial pathology is a causal contributor to the striatal neuronal dysfunction of Huntington’s disease (HD). We investigate mutant HTT-associated changes in gene expression by mouse and human striatal astrocytes, as well as in mouse microglia, to identify commonalities in glial pathobiology across spe...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cell reports (Cambridge) 2021-07, Vol.36 (1), p.109308-109308, Article 109308
Hauptverfasser: Benraiss, Abdellatif, Mariani, John N., Osipovitch, Mikhail, Cornwell, Adam, Windrem, Martha S., Villanueva, Carlos Benitez, Chandler-Militello, Devin, Goldman, Steven A.
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container_issue 1
container_start_page 109308
container_title Cell reports (Cambridge)
container_volume 36
creator Benraiss, Abdellatif
Mariani, John N.
Osipovitch, Mikhail
Cornwell, Adam
Windrem, Martha S.
Villanueva, Carlos Benitez
Chandler-Militello, Devin
Goldman, Steven A.
description Glial pathology is a causal contributor to the striatal neuronal dysfunction of Huntington’s disease (HD). We investigate mutant HTT-associated changes in gene expression by mouse and human striatal astrocytes, as well as in mouse microglia, to identify commonalities in glial pathobiology across species and models. Mouse striatal astrocytes are fluorescence-activated cell sorted (FACS) from R6/2 and zQ175 mice, which respectively express exon1-only or full-length mHTT, and human astrocytes are generated either from human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) expressing full-length mHTT or from fetal striatal astrocytes transduced with exon1-only mHTT. Comparison of differential gene expression across these conditions, all with respect to normal HTT controls, reveals cell-type-specific changes in transcription common to both species, yet with differences that distinguish glia expressing truncated mHTT versus full-length mHTT. These data indicate that the differential gene expression of glia expressing truncated mHTT may differ from that of cells expressing full-length mHTT, while identifying a conserved set of dysregulated pathways in HD glia. [Display omitted] •Glial transcription differs between cells expressing full-length and exon1-only mHTT•Truncated mHTT inhibits glial cholesterol pathway expression; full-length mHTT does not•Astrocytic structural genes are dysregulated by mHTT-expressing glia in all models•Mutant HTT-expressing mouse astrocytes manifest altered fiber distributions in vivo Benraiss et al. assess astrocytic and microglial gene expression across mouse and human models of Huntington’s disease, to define commonalities that may contribute to HD pathogenesis. They report differences between glia expressing full-length and exon 1-only mHTT and identify a core set of dysregulated pathways that predict glial pathology.
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We investigate mutant HTT-associated changes in gene expression by mouse and human striatal astrocytes, as well as in mouse microglia, to identify commonalities in glial pathobiology across species and models. Mouse striatal astrocytes are fluorescence-activated cell sorted (FACS) from R6/2 and zQ175 mice, which respectively express exon1-only or full-length mHTT, and human astrocytes are generated either from human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) expressing full-length mHTT or from fetal striatal astrocytes transduced with exon1-only mHTT. Comparison of differential gene expression across these conditions, all with respect to normal HTT controls, reveals cell-type-specific changes in transcription common to both species, yet with differences that distinguish glia expressing truncated mHTT versus full-length mHTT. These data indicate that the differential gene expression of glia expressing truncated mHTT may differ from that of cells expressing full-length mHTT, while identifying a conserved set of dysregulated pathways in HD glia. [Display omitted] •Glial transcription differs between cells expressing full-length and exon1-only mHTT•Truncated mHTT inhibits glial cholesterol pathway expression; full-length mHTT does not•Astrocytic structural genes are dysregulated by mHTT-expressing glia in all models•Mutant HTT-expressing mouse astrocytes manifest altered fiber distributions in vivo Benraiss et al. assess astrocytic and microglial gene expression across mouse and human models of Huntington’s disease, to define commonalities that may contribute to HD pathogenesis. 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We investigate mutant HTT-associated changes in gene expression by mouse and human striatal astrocytes, as well as in mouse microglia, to identify commonalities in glial pathobiology across species and models. Mouse striatal astrocytes are fluorescence-activated cell sorted (FACS) from R6/2 and zQ175 mice, which respectively express exon1-only or full-length mHTT, and human astrocytes are generated either from human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) expressing full-length mHTT or from fetal striatal astrocytes transduced with exon1-only mHTT. Comparison of differential gene expression across these conditions, all with respect to normal HTT controls, reveals cell-type-specific changes in transcription common to both species, yet with differences that distinguish glia expressing truncated mHTT versus full-length mHTT. These data indicate that the differential gene expression of glia expressing truncated mHTT may differ from that of cells expressing full-length mHTT, while identifying a conserved set of dysregulated pathways in HD glia. [Display omitted] •Glial transcription differs between cells expressing full-length and exon1-only mHTT•Truncated mHTT inhibits glial cholesterol pathway expression; full-length mHTT does not•Astrocytic structural genes are dysregulated by mHTT-expressing glia in all models•Mutant HTT-expressing mouse astrocytes manifest altered fiber distributions in vivo Benraiss et al. assess astrocytic and microglial gene expression across mouse and human models of Huntington’s disease, to define commonalities that may contribute to HD pathogenesis. 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subjects Animals
astrocytes
Astrocytes - metabolism
Astrocytes - pathology
Biosynthetic Pathways
cholesterol
Cholesterol - biosynthesis
Disease Models, Animal
Gene Expression Profiling
Gene Expression Regulation
Gene Regulatory Networks
glia
glial transcription
human embryonic stem cells
Humans
Huntingtin Protein - metabolism
Huntington Disease - genetics
Huntington Disease - pathology
Huntington’s disease
Mice
Mice, Inbred C57BL
mouse models
Mutant Proteins - metabolism
neurodegeneration
neurodegenerative disease
Neuroglia - metabolism
Neuroglia - pathology
Transcription, Genetic
title Cell-intrinsic glial pathology is conserved across human and murine models of Huntington’s disease
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