Department of Pathology and Cell Biology, Columbia University Irving Medical Center and New York Presbyterian Hospital, New York, USA.
Department of Pathology, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, USA.
Acta Neuropathol. 2021 Mar;141(3):399-413. doi: 10.1007/s00401-021-02269-4. Epub 2021 Jan 30.
Neuropathologic hallmarks of Huntington Disease (HD) include the progressive neurodegeneration of the striatum and the presence of Huntingtin (HTT) aggregates that result from abnormal polyQ expansion of the HTT gene. Whether the pathogenic trinucleotide repeat expansion of the HTT gene causes neurodevelopmental abnormalities has garnered attention in both murine and human studies; however, documentation of discrete malformations in autopsy brains of HD individuals has yet to be described. We retrospectively searched the New York Brain Bank (discovery cohort) and an independent cohort (validation cohort) to determine whether developmental malformations are more frequently detected in HD versus non-HD brains and to document their neuropathologic features. One-hundred and thirty HD and 1600 non-HD whole brains were included in the discovery cohort and 720 HD and 1989 non-HD half brains were assessed in the validation cohort. Cases with developmental malformations were found at 6.4-8.2 times greater frequency in HD than in non-HD brains (discovery cohort: OR 8.68, 95% CI 3.48-21.63, P=4.8 × 10; validation cohort: OR 6.50, 95% CI 1.83-23.17, P=0.0050). Periventricular nodular heterotopias (PNH) were the most frequent malformations and contained HTT and p62 aggregates analogous to the cortex, whereas cortical malformations with immature neuronal populations did not harbor such inclusions. HD individuals with malformations had heterozygous HTT CAG expansions between 40 and 52 repeats, were more frequently women, and all were asymmetric and focal, aside from one midline hypothalamic hamartoma. Using two independent brain bank cohorts, this large neuropathologic series demonstrates an increased occurrence of developmental malformations in HD brains. Since pathogenic HTT gene expansion is associated with genomic instability, one possible explanation is that neuronal precursors are more susceptible to somatic mutation of genes involved in cortical migration. Our findings further support emerging evidence that pathogenic trinucleotide repeat expansions of the HTT gene may impact neurodevelopment.
亨廷顿病(HD)的神经病理学特征包括纹状体的进行性神经退行性变和 Huntingtin(HTT)聚集体的存在,这些聚集体是由 HTT 基因的异常多聚 Q 扩展引起的。HTT 基因的致病三核苷酸重复扩展是否导致神经发育异常,这在小鼠和人类研究中都引起了关注;然而,尚未描述 HD 个体尸检大脑中离散畸形的存在。我们回顾性地搜索了纽约脑库(发现队列)和一个独立队列(验证队列),以确定在 HD 与非 HD 大脑中是否更频繁地检测到发育畸形,并记录其神经病理学特征。在发现队列中纳入了 130 例 HD 和 1600 例非 HD 全脑,在验证队列中纳入了 720 例 HD 和 1989 例非 HD 半脑。在 HD 大脑中发现发育畸形的频率比非 HD 大脑高 6.4-8.2 倍(发现队列:OR 8.68,95%CI 3.48-21.63,P=4.8×10;验证队列:OR 6.50,95%CI 1.83-23.17,P=0.0050)。室周结节性异位(PNH)是最常见的畸形,含有类似于皮质的 HTT 和 p62 聚集体,而含有不成熟神经元群体的皮质畸形则不含有这些内含物。有畸形的 HD 个体的 HTT CAG 扩展在 40 到 52 个重复之间,更多为女性,且除了一个中线下丘脑错构瘤外,均为不对称性和局灶性。使用两个独立的脑库队列,这项大型神经病理学研究表明,HD 大脑中发育畸形的发生率增加。由于致病 HTT 基因扩展与基因组不稳定性相关,一种可能的解释是神经元前体更容易受到涉及皮质迁移的基因的体细胞突变的影响。我们的发现进一步支持了新兴证据,即 HTT 基因的致病三核苷酸重复扩展可能影响神经发育。