Decreased glycogen synthase kinase-3 levels and activity contribute to Huntington's disease

Publication date

2022-03-28T12:38:47Z

2022-03-28T12:38:47Z

2015-09-01

2022-03-28T12:38:47Z

Abstract

Huntington's disease (HD) is a hereditary neurodegenerative disorder characterized by brain atrophy particularly in striatum leading to personality changes, chorea and dementia. Glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3) is a serine/threonine kinase in the crossroad of many signaling pathways that is highly pleiotropic as it phosphorylates more than hundred substrates including structural, metabolic, and signaling proteins. Increased GSK-3 activity is believed to contribute to the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's disease and GSK-3 inhibitors have been postulated as therapeutic agents for neurodegeneration. Regarding HD, GSK-3 inhibitors have shown beneficial effects in cell and invertebrate animal models but no evident efficacy in mouse models. Intriguingly, those studies were performed without interrogating GSK-3 level and activity in HD brain. Here we aim to explore the level and also the enzymatic activity of GSK-3 in the striatum and other less affected brain regions of HD patients and of the R6/1 mouse model to then elucidate the possible contribution of its alteration to HD pathogenesis by genetic manipulation in mice. We report a dramatic decrease in GSK-3 levels and activity in striatum and cortex of HD patients with similar results in the mouse model. Correction of the GSK-3 deficit in HD mice, by combining with transgenic mice with conditional GSK-3 expression, resulted in amelioration of their brain atrophy and behavioral motor and learning deficits. Thus, our results demonstrate that decreased brain GSK-3 contributes to HD neurological phenotype and open new therapeutic opportunities based on increasing GSK-3 activity or attenuating the harmful consequences of its decrease.

Document Type

Article


Accepted version

Language

English

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Related items

Versió postprint del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddv224

Human Molecular Genetics, 2015, vol. 24, num. 17, p. 5040-5052

https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddv224

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/FP7/229673/EU//BIOTRACK

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(c) Fernández-Nogales, Marta et al., 2015