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Protection by glia-conditioned medium in a cell model of Huntington disease

The physiological role of huntingtin and the pathogenic mechanisms that produce the disease are unknown. Mutant huntingtin changes its normal localization and produces cytoplasmic and intranuclear inclusions, changes gene transcription, alters synaptic transmission, impairs mitochondrial activity an...

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Autores principales: Ruiz, Carolina, Casarejos, Maria Jose, Gomez, Ana, Solano, Rosa, de Yebenes, Justo Garcia, Mena, Maria Angeles
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3423315/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22919565
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/4fbca54a2028b
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author Ruiz, Carolina
Casarejos, Maria Jose
Gomez, Ana
Solano, Rosa
de Yebenes, Justo Garcia
Mena, Maria Angeles
author_facet Ruiz, Carolina
Casarejos, Maria Jose
Gomez, Ana
Solano, Rosa
de Yebenes, Justo Garcia
Mena, Maria Angeles
author_sort Ruiz, Carolina
collection PubMed
description The physiological role of huntingtin and the pathogenic mechanisms that produce the disease are unknown. Mutant huntingtin changes its normal localization and produces cytoplasmic and intranuclear inclusions, changes gene transcription, alters synaptic transmission, impairs mitochondrial activity and activates caspases and other pro-apoptotic molecules, promotes excitotoxicity, energy deficits, synthesis and release reduction of neurotrophic factors and oxidative stress. Previous studies confirm that the mutant huntingtin difficult neurotrophic function of astrocytes leading to neuronal dysfunction in Huntington’s disease. Our objective was to study the neuroprotective potential role of glia-conditioned medium (GCM) in an in vitro model of Huntington’s disease. We used conditionally-immortalized striatal neuronal progenitor cell lines (STHdhQ7/Q7 and STHdhQ111/Q111) expressing endogenous levels of normal and mutant huntingtin with 7 and 111 glutamines, respectively. We studied the protection of fetal and postnatal glia conditioned medium (GCM) on H2O2 (2 µM), glutamate (5 mM) and 3-nitropropionic acid (2.5 mM) related toxicity. We also compared the neuroprotective effects of GCM versus that of the growth factors bFGF, BDNF and GDNF. Fetal GCM protects from every toxin, reducing the cell death and increasing the cell survival. Fetal GCM reduces the caspases fragmentation of the protein PARP, the expression of chaperone Hsp70 and the accumulation of ROS and polyubiquitinated proteins. In addition, in Q111 striatal cells treated with H2O2 (2 µM) for 24 hours, the intracellular GSH levels are higher in the presence of GCM. Notably, the 13-day and 2-month postnatal GCM, totally protects from H2O2 induced cell death in mutant striatal cells. GCM neuroprotective effects are more potent than those of the already identified neurotrophic factors. We conclude that GCM protects Q111 cells from neuronal neurotoxins and the effects of GCM are more potent than those of any known neurotrophic factor. GCM may contain new and more potent, as yet unidentified, neurotrophic molecules, potentially useful in patients with Huntington’s disease.
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spelling pubmed-34233152012-08-22 Protection by glia-conditioned medium in a cell model of Huntington disease Ruiz, Carolina Casarejos, Maria Jose Gomez, Ana Solano, Rosa de Yebenes, Justo Garcia Mena, Maria Angeles PLoS Curr Molecular/Cellular The physiological role of huntingtin and the pathogenic mechanisms that produce the disease are unknown. Mutant huntingtin changes its normal localization and produces cytoplasmic and intranuclear inclusions, changes gene transcription, alters synaptic transmission, impairs mitochondrial activity and activates caspases and other pro-apoptotic molecules, promotes excitotoxicity, energy deficits, synthesis and release reduction of neurotrophic factors and oxidative stress. Previous studies confirm that the mutant huntingtin difficult neurotrophic function of astrocytes leading to neuronal dysfunction in Huntington’s disease. Our objective was to study the neuroprotective potential role of glia-conditioned medium (GCM) in an in vitro model of Huntington’s disease. We used conditionally-immortalized striatal neuronal progenitor cell lines (STHdhQ7/Q7 and STHdhQ111/Q111) expressing endogenous levels of normal and mutant huntingtin with 7 and 111 glutamines, respectively. We studied the protection of fetal and postnatal glia conditioned medium (GCM) on H2O2 (2 µM), glutamate (5 mM) and 3-nitropropionic acid (2.5 mM) related toxicity. We also compared the neuroprotective effects of GCM versus that of the growth factors bFGF, BDNF and GDNF. Fetal GCM protects from every toxin, reducing the cell death and increasing the cell survival. Fetal GCM reduces the caspases fragmentation of the protein PARP, the expression of chaperone Hsp70 and the accumulation of ROS and polyubiquitinated proteins. In addition, in Q111 striatal cells treated with H2O2 (2 µM) for 24 hours, the intracellular GSH levels are higher in the presence of GCM. Notably, the 13-day and 2-month postnatal GCM, totally protects from H2O2 induced cell death in mutant striatal cells. GCM neuroprotective effects are more potent than those of the already identified neurotrophic factors. We conclude that GCM protects Q111 cells from neuronal neurotoxins and the effects of GCM are more potent than those of any known neurotrophic factor. GCM may contain new and more potent, as yet unidentified, neurotrophic molecules, potentially useful in patients with Huntington’s disease. Public Library of Science 2012-07-02 /pmc/articles/PMC3423315/ /pubmed/22919565 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/4fbca54a2028b Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Molecular/Cellular
Ruiz, Carolina
Casarejos, Maria Jose
Gomez, Ana
Solano, Rosa
de Yebenes, Justo Garcia
Mena, Maria Angeles
Protection by glia-conditioned medium in a cell model of Huntington disease
title Protection by glia-conditioned medium in a cell model of Huntington disease
title_full Protection by glia-conditioned medium in a cell model of Huntington disease
title_fullStr Protection by glia-conditioned medium in a cell model of Huntington disease
title_full_unstemmed Protection by glia-conditioned medium in a cell model of Huntington disease
title_short Protection by glia-conditioned medium in a cell model of Huntington disease
title_sort protection by glia-conditioned medium in a cell model of huntington disease
topic Molecular/Cellular
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3423315/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22919565
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/4fbca54a2028b
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