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Characterization of forebrain neurons derived from late-onset Huntington's disease human embryonic stem cell lines

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posted on 2024-11-16, 01:46 authored by Jonathan C Niclis, Anita Pinar, John M Haynes, Walaa Alsanie, Robert Jenny, Mirella DottoriMirella Dottori, David S Cram
Huntington's disease (HD) is an incurable neurodegenerative disorder caused by a CAG repeat expansion in exon 1 of the Huntingtin (HTT) gene. Recently, induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) lines carrying atypical and aggressive (CAG60+) HD variants have been generated and exhibit disparate molecular pathologies. Here we investigate two human embryonic stem ce ll (hESC) lines carrying CAG37 and CAG51 typical late-onset repeat expansions in comparison to wildtype control lines during undifferentiated states and throughout forebrain neuronal differentiation. Pluripotent HD lines demonstrate growth, viability, pluripotent gene expression, mitochondrial activity and forebrain specification that is indistinguishable from control lines. Expression profiles of crucial genes known to be dysregulated in HD remain unperturbed in the presence of mutant protein and throughout differentiation; however, elevated glutamate-evoked responses were observed in HD CAG51 neurons. These findings suggest typical late-onset HD mutations do not alter pluripotent parameters or the capacity to generate forebrain neurons, but that such progeny may recapitulate hallmarks observed in established HD model systems. Such HD models will help further our understanding of the cascade of pathological events leading to disease onset and progression, while simultaneously facilitating the identification of candidate HD therapeutics.

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Citation

Niclis, J. C., Pinar, A., Haynes, J. M., Alsanie, W., Jenny, R., Dottori, M. & Cram, D. S. (2013). Characterization of forebrain neurons derived from late-onset Huntington's disease human embryonic stem cell lines. Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience, 7 (APR), 37-1-37-13.

Journal title

Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience

Issue

APR

Language

English

Notes

This Document is Protected by copyright and was first published by Frontiers. All rights reserved. It is reproduced with permission.

RIS ID

117763

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