Regional differences of somatic CAG repeat instability do not account for selective neuronal vulnerability in a knock-in mouse model of SCA1

K Watase, KJT Venken, Y Sun, HT Orr… - Human molecular …, 2003 - academic.oup.com
K Watase, KJT Venken, Y Sun, HT Orr, HY Zoghbi
Human molecular genetics, 2003academic.oup.com
Expression of unstable translated CAG repeats is the mutational mechanism in nine different
neurodegenerative disorders. Although the products of genes harboring these repeats are
widely expressed, a subset of neurons is vulnerable in each disease accounting for the
different phenotypes. Somatic instability of the expanded CAG repeat has been implicated
as a factor mediating the selective striatal neurodegeneration in Huntington disease. It
remains unknown, however, whether such a mechanism contributes to the selective …
Abstract
Expression of unstable translated CAG repeats is the mutational mechanism in nine different neurodegenerative disorders. Although the products of genes harboring these repeats are widely expressed, a subset of neurons is vulnerable in each disease accounting for the different phenotypes. Somatic instability of the expanded CAG repeat has been implicated as a factor mediating the selective striatal neurodegeneration in Huntington disease. It remains unknown, however, whether such a mechanism contributes to the selective neurodegeneration in other polyglutamine diseases or not. To address this question, we investigated the pattern of CAG repeat instability in a knock-in mouse model of spinocerebellar ataxia type 1 (SCA1). Small pool PCR analysis on DNA from various neuronal and non-neuronal tissues revealed that somatic repeat instability was most remarkable in the striatum. In the two vulnerable tissues, cerebellum and spinal cord, there were substantial differences in the profiles of mosaicism. These results suggest that in SCA1 there is no clear causal relationship between the degree of somatic instability and selective neuronal vulnerability. The finding that somatic instability is most pronounced in the striatum of various knock-in models of polyglutamine diseases highlights the role of trans-acting tissue- or cell-specific factors in mediating the instability.
Oxford University Press