Department of Medical and Molecular Genetics, King's College London, London, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2012;7(2):e31080. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0031080. Epub 2012 Feb 8.
Huntington's disease (HD) is an autosomal dominant progressive neurodegenerative disorder caused by an expansion of a CAG/polyglutamine repeat for which there are no disease modifying treatments. In recent years, transcriptional dysregulation has emerged as a pathogenic process that appears early in disease progression and has been recapitulated across multiple HD models. Altered histone acetylation has been proposed to underlie this transcriptional dysregulation and histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors, such as suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid (SAHA), have been shown to improve polyglutamine-dependent phenotypes in numerous HD models. However potent pan-HDAC inhibitors such as SAHA display toxic side-effects. To better understand the mechanism underlying this potential therapeutic benefit and to dissociate the beneficial and toxic effects of SAHA, we set out to identify the specific HDAC(s) involved in this process. For this purpose, we are exploring the effect of the genetic reduction of specific HDACs on HD-related phenotypes in the R6/2 mouse model of HD. The study presented here focuses on HDAC3, which, as a class I HDAC, is one of the preferred targets of SAHA and is directly involved in histone deacetylation. To evaluate a potential benefit of Hdac3 genetic reduction in R6/2, we generated a mouse carrying a critical deletion in the Hdac3 gene. We confirmed that the complete knock-out of Hdac3 is embryonic lethal. To test the effects of HDAC3 inhibition, we used Hdac3(+/-) heterozygotes to reduce nuclear HDAC3 levels in R6/2 mice. We found that Hdac3 knock-down does not ameliorate physiological or behavioural phenotypes and has no effect on molecular changes including dysregulated transcripts. We conclude that HDAC3 should not be considered as the major mediator of the beneficial effect induced by SAHA and other HDAC inhibitors in HD.
亨廷顿病 (HD) 是一种常染色体显性进行性神经退行性疾病,由 CAG/多聚谷氨酰胺重复扩展引起,目前尚无疾病修饰治疗方法。近年来,转录失调已成为一种发病机制,在疾病进展早期出现,并在多种 HD 模型中得到再现。有人提出,组蛋白乙酰化的改变是这种转录失调的基础,组蛋白去乙酰化酶 (HDAC) 抑制剂,如琥珀酰亚胺基羟肟酸 (SAHA),已被证明可改善多种 HD 模型中的多聚谷氨酰胺依赖性表型。然而,像 SAHA 这样强效的泛 HDAC 抑制剂会显示出毒性副作用。为了更好地了解这种潜在治疗益处的机制,并区分 SAHA 的有益和毒性作用,我们着手确定参与该过程的特定 HDAC。为此,我们正在探索特定 HDAC 的遗传减少对 HD 相关表型的影响,以 R6/2 型 HD 小鼠模型为研究对象。本研究重点介绍 HDAC3,作为 I 类 HDAC,它是 SAHA 的首选靶标之一,直接参与组蛋白去乙酰化。为了评估 Hdac3 遗传减少在 R6/2 中的潜在益处,我们生成了一种携带 Hdac3 基因关键缺失的小鼠。我们证实 Hdac3 的完全敲除是胚胎致死的。为了测试 HDAC3 抑制的效果,我们使用 Hdac3(+/-)杂合子来降低 R6/2 小鼠中的核 HDAC3 水平。我们发现 Hdac3 敲低不能改善生理或行为表型,对包括失调转录物在内的分子变化也没有影响。我们得出结论,HDAC3 不应被视为 SAHA 和其他 HDAC 抑制剂在 HD 中诱导的有益作用的主要介导物。