Back to Search Start Over

Inhibition of transglutaminase 2 mitigates transcriptional dysregulation in models of Huntington disease

Authors :
Zoya V. Niatsetskaya
Jing Fan
Rick Cerione
Manuela Basso
Bo Li
Lata Mahishi
Anatoly A. Starkov
Daniel H. Geschwind
Hoon Ryu
J. Lawrence Marsh
Sama F. Sleiman
Ralf Pasternack
Giovanni Coppola
Lynn A. Raymond
Siiri E. Iismaa
M. Flint Beal
Natalia A. Smirnova
Marc A. Antonyak
Brett Langley
Leslie M. Thompson
Stephen J. McConoughey
Rajnish Kumar Chaturvedi
Arthur J.L. Cooper
Li Xia
Rajiv R. Ratan
Judit Pallos
Martin Hils
Source :
McConoughey, Stephen J; Basso, Manuela; Niatsetskaya, Zoya V; Sleiman, Sama F; Smirnova, Natalia A; Langley, Brett C; et al.(2010). Inhibition of transglutaminase 2 mitigates transcriptional dysregulation in models of Huntington disease. EMBO Molecular Medicine, 2(9), 349-370. doi: 10.1002/emmm.201000084. UC Irvine: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/97c070qr, EMBO Molecular Medicine
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2010.

Abstract

Caused by a polyglutamine expansion in the huntingtin protein, Huntington's disease leads to striatal degeneration via the transcriptional dysregulation of a number of genes, including those involved in mitochondrial biogenesis. Here we show that transglutaminase 2, which is upregulated in HD, exacerbates transcriptional dysregulation by acting as a selective corepressor of nuclear genes; transglutaminase 2 interacts directly with histone H3 in the nucleus. In a cellular model of HD, transglutaminase inhibition de-repressed two established regulators of mitochondrial function, PGC-1alpha and cytochrome c and reversed susceptibility of human HD cells to the mitochondrial toxin, 3-nitroproprionic acid; however, protection mediated by transglutaminase inhibition was not associated with improved mitochondrial bioenergetics. A gene microarray analysis indicated that transglutaminase inhibition normalized expression of not only mitochondrial genes but also 40% of genes that are dysregulated in HD striatal neurons, including chaperone and histone genes. Moreover, transglutaminase inhibition attenuated degeneration in a Drosophila model of HD and protected mouse HD striatal neurons from excitotoxicity. Altogether these findings demonstrate that selective TG inhibition broadly corrects transcriptional dysregulation in HD and defines a novel HDAC-independent epigenetic strategy for treating neurodegeneration.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
McConoughey, Stephen J; Basso, Manuela; Niatsetskaya, Zoya V; Sleiman, Sama F; Smirnova, Natalia A; Langley, Brett C; et al.(2010). Inhibition of transglutaminase 2 mitigates transcriptional dysregulation in models of Huntington disease. EMBO Molecular Medicine, 2(9), 349-370. doi: 10.1002/emmm.201000084. UC Irvine: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/97c070qr, EMBO Molecular Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a8151485cdceefc9b97c76c1226e619a