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Six-month partial suppression of Huntingtin is well tolerated in the adult rhesus striatum

Huntington's disease is caused by expression of a mutant form of Huntingtin protein containing an expanded polyglutamine repeat. One possible treatment for Huntington's disease may be to reduce expression of mutant Huntingtin in the brain via RNA interference. Unless the therapeutic molecu...

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Autores principales: Grondin, Richard, Kaytor, Michael D., Ai, Yi, Nelson, Peter T., Thakker, Deepak R., Heisel, Jennifer, Weatherspoon, Marcy R., Blum, Janelle L., Burright, Eric N., Zhang, Zhiming, Kaemmerer, William F.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2012
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Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3326247/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22252996
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awr333
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author Grondin, Richard
Kaytor, Michael D.
Ai, Yi
Nelson, Peter T.
Thakker, Deepak R.
Heisel, Jennifer
Weatherspoon, Marcy R.
Blum, Janelle L.
Burright, Eric N.
Zhang, Zhiming
Kaemmerer, William F.
author_facet Grondin, Richard
Kaytor, Michael D.
Ai, Yi
Nelson, Peter T.
Thakker, Deepak R.
Heisel, Jennifer
Weatherspoon, Marcy R.
Blum, Janelle L.
Burright, Eric N.
Zhang, Zhiming
Kaemmerer, William F.
author_sort Grondin, Richard
collection PubMed
description Huntington's disease is caused by expression of a mutant form of Huntingtin protein containing an expanded polyglutamine repeat. One possible treatment for Huntington's disease may be to reduce expression of mutant Huntingtin in the brain via RNA interference. Unless the therapeutic molecule is designed to be allele-specific, both wild-type and mutant protein will be suppressed by an RNA interference treatment. A key question is whether suppression of wild-type as well as mutant Huntingtin in targeted brain regions can be tolerated and result in a net benefit to patients with Huntington's disease. Whether Huntingtin performs essential functions in the adult brain is unclear. Here, we tested the hypothesis that the adult primate brain can tolerate moderately reduced levels of wild-type Huntingtin protein for an extended period of time. A serotype 2 adeno-associated viral vector encoding for a short hairpin RNA targeting rhesus huntingtin messenger RNA (active vector) was bilaterally injected into the striatum of four adult rhesus monkeys. Four additional animals received a comparable vector encoding a scrambled control short hairpin RNA (control vector). General health and motor behaviour were monitored for 6 months. Upon termination, brain tissues were sampled and assessed blindly for (i) huntingtin messenger RNA knockdown; (ii) Huntingtin protein expression; and (iii) neuropathological changes. Reduction in wild-type huntingtin messenger RNA levels averaging ∼30% was measured in the striatum of active vector recipients 6 months post-injection. A widespread reduction in Huntingtin protein levels was also observed by immunohistochemistry in these animals, with an average protein reduction of ∼45% relative to controls measured by western blot analysis in the putamen of active vector recipients. As with control vector recipients, no adverse effects were observed behaviourally, and no neurodegeneration was found on histological examination of active vector recipients. Our results suggest that long-term partial suppression of wild-type Huntingtin may be safe, and thus if a comparable level of suppression of mutant Huntingtin is beneficial, then partial suppression of both wild-type and mutant Huntingtin may result in a net benefit in patients with heterozygous Huntington's disease.
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spelling pubmed-33262472012-04-16 Six-month partial suppression of Huntingtin is well tolerated in the adult rhesus striatum Grondin, Richard Kaytor, Michael D. Ai, Yi Nelson, Peter T. Thakker, Deepak R. Heisel, Jennifer Weatherspoon, Marcy R. Blum, Janelle L. Burright, Eric N. Zhang, Zhiming Kaemmerer, William F. Brain Occasional Paper Huntington's disease is caused by expression of a mutant form of Huntingtin protein containing an expanded polyglutamine repeat. One possible treatment for Huntington's disease may be to reduce expression of mutant Huntingtin in the brain via RNA interference. Unless the therapeutic molecule is designed to be allele-specific, both wild-type and mutant protein will be suppressed by an RNA interference treatment. A key question is whether suppression of wild-type as well as mutant Huntingtin in targeted brain regions can be tolerated and result in a net benefit to patients with Huntington's disease. Whether Huntingtin performs essential functions in the adult brain is unclear. Here, we tested the hypothesis that the adult primate brain can tolerate moderately reduced levels of wild-type Huntingtin protein for an extended period of time. A serotype 2 adeno-associated viral vector encoding for a short hairpin RNA targeting rhesus huntingtin messenger RNA (active vector) was bilaterally injected into the striatum of four adult rhesus monkeys. Four additional animals received a comparable vector encoding a scrambled control short hairpin RNA (control vector). General health and motor behaviour were monitored for 6 months. Upon termination, brain tissues were sampled and assessed blindly for (i) huntingtin messenger RNA knockdown; (ii) Huntingtin protein expression; and (iii) neuropathological changes. Reduction in wild-type huntingtin messenger RNA levels averaging ∼30% was measured in the striatum of active vector recipients 6 months post-injection. A widespread reduction in Huntingtin protein levels was also observed by immunohistochemistry in these animals, with an average protein reduction of ∼45% relative to controls measured by western blot analysis in the putamen of active vector recipients. As with control vector recipients, no adverse effects were observed behaviourally, and no neurodegeneration was found on histological examination of active vector recipients. Our results suggest that long-term partial suppression of wild-type Huntingtin may be safe, and thus if a comparable level of suppression of mutant Huntingtin is beneficial, then partial suppression of both wild-type and mutant Huntingtin may result in a net benefit in patients with heterozygous Huntington's disease. Oxford University Press 2012-04 2012-01-16 /pmc/articles/PMC3326247/ /pubmed/22252996 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awr333 Text en © The Author (2012). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0), which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Occasional Paper
Grondin, Richard
Kaytor, Michael D.
Ai, Yi
Nelson, Peter T.
Thakker, Deepak R.
Heisel, Jennifer
Weatherspoon, Marcy R.
Blum, Janelle L.
Burright, Eric N.
Zhang, Zhiming
Kaemmerer, William F.
Six-month partial suppression of Huntingtin is well tolerated in the adult rhesus striatum
title Six-month partial suppression of Huntingtin is well tolerated in the adult rhesus striatum
title_full Six-month partial suppression of Huntingtin is well tolerated in the adult rhesus striatum
title_fullStr Six-month partial suppression of Huntingtin is well tolerated in the adult rhesus striatum
title_full_unstemmed Six-month partial suppression of Huntingtin is well tolerated in the adult rhesus striatum
title_short Six-month partial suppression of Huntingtin is well tolerated in the adult rhesus striatum
title_sort six-month partial suppression of huntingtin is well tolerated in the adult rhesus striatum
topic Occasional Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3326247/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22252996
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awr333
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