Yang Shang-Hsun, Cheng Pei-Hsun, Banta Heather, Piotrowska-Nitsche Karolina, Yang Jin-Jing, Cheng Eric C H, Snyder Brooke, Larkin Katherine, Liu Jun, Orkin Jack, Fang Zhi-Hui, Smith Yoland, Bachevalier Jocelyne, Zola Stuart M, Li Shi-Hua, Li Xiao-Jiang, Chan Anthony W S
Yerkes National Primate Research Center, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia 30329, USA.
Nature. 2008 Jun 12;453(7197):921-4. doi: 10.1038/nature06975. Epub 2008 May 18.
Non-human primates are valuable for modelling human disorders and for developing therapeutic strategies; however, little work has been reported in establishing transgenic non-human primate models of human diseases. Huntington's disease (HD) is an autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disorder characterized by motor impairment, cognitive deterioration and psychiatric disturbances followed by death within 10-15 years of the onset of the symptoms. HD is caused by the expansion of cytosine-adenine-guanine (CAG, translated into glutamine) trinucleotide repeats in the first exon of the human huntingtin (HTT) gene. Mutant HTT with expanded polyglutamine (polyQ) is widely expressed in the brain and peripheral tissues, but causes selective neurodegeneration that is most prominent in the striatum and cortex of the brain. Although rodent models of HD have been developed, these models do not satisfactorily parallel the brain changes and behavioural features observed in HD patients. Because of the close physiological, neurological and genetic similarities between humans and higher primates, monkeys can serve as very useful models for understanding human physiology and diseases. Here we report our progress in developing a transgenic model of HD in a rhesus macaque that expresses polyglutamine-expanded HTT. Hallmark features of HD, including nuclear inclusions and neuropil aggregates, were observed in the brains of the HD transgenic monkeys. Additionally, the transgenic monkeys showed important clinical features of HD, including dystonia and chorea. A transgenic HD monkey model may open the way to understanding the underlying biology of HD better, and to the development of potential therapies. Moreover, our data suggest that it will be feasible to generate valuable non-human primate models of HD and possibly other human genetic diseases.
非人灵长类动物对于人类疾病建模和治疗策略的开发具有重要价值;然而,关于建立人类疾病的转基因非人灵长类动物模型的报道却很少。亨廷顿舞蹈症(HD)是一种常染色体显性神经退行性疾病,其特征为运动障碍、认知衰退和精神紊乱,症状出现后10 - 15年内会导致死亡。HD是由人类亨廷顿蛋白(HTT)基因第一个外显子中的胞嘧啶 - 腺嘌呤 - 鸟嘌呤(CAG,翻译成谷氨酰胺)三核苷酸重复序列扩增引起的。具有扩增的聚谷氨酰胺(polyQ)的突变型HTT在大脑和外周组织中广泛表达,但会导致选择性神经退行性变,在大脑纹状体和皮质中最为显著。尽管已经开发出HD的啮齿动物模型,但这些模型并不能令人满意地模拟HD患者所观察到的大脑变化和行为特征。由于人类与高等灵长类动物在生理、神经和遗传方面具有密切的相似性,猴子可作为理解人类生理和疾病的非常有用的模型。在此,我们报告我们在恒河猴中开发表达聚谷氨酰胺扩增的HTT的HD转基因模型方面取得 的进展。在HD转基因猴子的大脑中观察到了HD的标志性特征,包括核内包涵体和神经纤维聚集体。此外,转基因猴子表现出HD的重要临床特征,包括肌张力障碍和舞蹈症。转基因HD猴子模型可能为更好地理解HD的潜在生物学机制以及开发潜在治疗方法开辟道路。此外,我们的数据表明,生成有价值的HD非人灵长类动物模型以及可能的其他人类遗传疾病模型将是可行的。