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Benefits of global mutant huntingtin lowering diminish over time in a Huntington’s disease mouse model
Deanna M. Marchionini, Jeh-Ping Liu, Alberto Ambesi-Impiombato, Kimberly Kerker, Kim Cirillo, Mukesh Bansal, Rich Mushlin, Daniela Brunner, Sylvie Ramboz, Mei Kwan, Kirsten Kuhlbrodt, Karsten Tillack, Finn Peters, Leena Rauhala, John Obenauer, Jonathan R. Greene, Christopher Hartl, Vinod Khetarpal, Brenda Lager, Jim Rosinski, Jeff Aaronson, Morshed Alam, Ethan Signer, Ignacio Muñoz-Sanjuán, David Howland, Scott O. Zeitlin
Deanna M. Marchionini, Jeh-Ping Liu, Alberto Ambesi-Impiombato, Kimberly Kerker, Kim Cirillo, Mukesh Bansal, Rich Mushlin, Daniela Brunner, Sylvie Ramboz, Mei Kwan, Kirsten Kuhlbrodt, Karsten Tillack, Finn Peters, Leena Rauhala, John Obenauer, Jonathan R. Greene, Christopher Hartl, Vinod Khetarpal, Brenda Lager, Jim Rosinski, Jeff Aaronson, Morshed Alam, Ethan Signer, Ignacio Muñoz-Sanjuán, David Howland, Scott O. Zeitlin
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Research Article Neuroscience

Benefits of global mutant huntingtin lowering diminish over time in a Huntington’s disease mouse model

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Abstract

We have developed an inducible Huntington’s disease (HD) mouse model that allows temporal control of whole-body allele-specific mutant huntingtin (mHtt) expression. We asked whether moderate global lowering of mHtt (~50%) was sufficient for long-term amelioration of HD-related deficits and, if so, whether early mHtt lowering (before measurable deficits) was required. Both early and late mHtt lowering delayed behavioral dysfunction and mHTT protein aggregation, as measured biochemically. However, long-term follow-up revealed that the benefits, in all mHtt-lowering groups, attenuated by 12 months of age. While early mHtt lowering attenuated cortical and striatal transcriptional dysregulation evaluated at 6 months of age, the benefits diminished by 12 months of age, and late mHtt lowering did not ameliorate striatal transcriptional dysregulation at 12 months of age. Only early mHtt lowering delayed the elevation in cerebrospinal fluid neurofilament light chain that we observed in our model starting at 9 months of age. As small-molecule HTT-lowering therapeutics progress to the clinic, our findings suggest that moderate mHtt lowering allows disease progression to continue, albeit at a slower rate, and could be relevant to the degree of mHTT lowering required to sustain long-term benefits in humans.

Authors

Deanna M. Marchionini, Jeh-Ping Liu, Alberto Ambesi-Impiombato, Kimberly Kerker, Kim Cirillo, Mukesh Bansal, Rich Mushlin, Daniela Brunner, Sylvie Ramboz, Mei Kwan, Kirsten Kuhlbrodt, Karsten Tillack, Finn Peters, Leena Rauhala, John Obenauer, Jonathan R. Greene, Christopher Hartl, Vinod Khetarpal, Brenda Lager, Jim Rosinski, Jeff Aaronson, Morshed Alam, Ethan Signer, Ignacio Muñoz-Sanjuán, David Howland, Scott O. Zeitlin

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Figure 2

Behavioral phenotypes were delayed by mHtt lowering.

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Behavioral phenotypes were delayed by mHtt lowering.
Decorrelated ranked...
Decorrelated ranked feature analysis for WTs and LacQ140 groups at different ages and effect of mHtt lowering. (A) Blue clouds represent WTs groups (WT: n = 8 males, n = 16 females; WT + IPTG: n = 15 males, n = 16 females), red clouds represent LacQ140 groups (n = 14 males, n = 16 females). The center of each cloud represents the mean, small darker shaded ellipses represent the SEM, and the larger lighter shaded ellipses represent the SD of each groups’ distribution. Discrimination Indices between pairs of WTs and LacQ140 groups at each age capture the strength of the phenotypic signature of this model. (B–D) Each mHtt-lowered group was projected onto the DRF space to quantify the mHtt-lowering effect of LacQ140_A (n = 8 males, n = 15 females) (B), LacQ140_2M (n = 16 males, n = 16 females) (C), and LacQ140_8M (n = 16 males, n = 16 females) (D), compared with LacQ140 (solid line). ****P < 0.0001, ***P < 0.001, **P < 0.01. %Z = 2.6, P = 0.005 (1-tailed Z test). An additional mixed-model analysis evaluated the effects of age and treatment (different mHtt-lowering regimens) as factors and their interaction. Main effects of age and its interaction with treatment were significant (F[2,89] = 16.02, P < 0.0001, and F[3, 90.8], P = 0.038, respectively) but the treatment main effect was not (F[2, 87.8] = 0.44, P = 0.64). ~P = 0.03, #P = 0.01, ###P < 0.0001.

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