• Neuroscience · Jan 2003

    Neocortical neurons cultured from mice with expanded CAG repeats in the huntingtin gene: unaltered vulnerability to excitotoxins and other insults.

    • B J Snider, J L Moss, F J Revilla, C-S Lee, V C Wheeler, M E Macdonald, and D W Choi.
    • Center for the Study of Nervous System Injury and Department of Neurology, Washington University School of Medicine, Campus Box 8111, 660 South Euclid, St. Louis, MO 63110, USA. sniderj@neuro.wustl.edu
    • Neuroscience. 2003 Jan 1; 120 (3): 617-25.

    AbstractGlutamate-mediated excitotoxicity might contribute to the pathogenesis of Huntington's disease and other polyglutamine repeat disorders. We used murine neocortical cultures derived from transgenic and knock-in mice to test the effect of expression of expanded polyglutamine-containing huntingtin on neuronal vulnerability to excitotoxins or other insults. Neurons cultured from mice expressing either a normal length (Hdh(Q20)) or expanded (Hdh(Q111)) CAG repeat as a knock-in genetic alteration in exon one of the mouse Hdh gene [Hum Mol Genet 8 (1999) 115] had similar vulnerability to N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) and kainate-mediated excitotoxicity. These neurons also exhibited similar vulnerability to oxidative stress (24 h exposure to 10-100 microM paraquat or 1-10 microM menadione), apoptosis (48 h exposure to 30-100 nM staurosporine or 1 microM dizocilpine maleate (MK-801) and proteasome inhibition (48 h exposure to 0.3-3 microM MG-132). Neocortical neurons cultured from mice transgenic for an expanded CAG repeat-containing exon 1 of the human HD gene (Mangiarini et al., 1996, R6/2 line) and non-transgenic littermate controls also had similar vulnerability to NMDA and kainate-mediated excitotoxicity. These observations suggest that expression of expanded polyglutamine-containing huntingtin does not acutely alter the vulnerability of cortical neurons to excitotoxic, oxidative or apoptotic insults.

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