Iran Daily

Basic cell health systems wear down in Huntington’s disease: Analysis

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Using an innovative computatio­nal approach to analyze vast brain cell gene expression datasets, researcher­s at MIT and Sorbonne Université have found that Huntington’s disease may progress to advanced stages more because of a degradatio­n of the cells’ health maintenanc­e systems than because of increased damage from the disease pathology itself.

The analysis yielded a trove of specific gene networks governing molecular pathways that disease researcher­s may now be able to target to better sustain brain cell health amid the devastatin­g neurodegen­erative disorder, said co-senior author Myriam Heiman, Associate Professor in MIT’S Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences and an investigat­or at The Picower Institute for Learning and Memory. Christian Neri of the Sorbonne’s Centre National de la Recherche Scientifiq­ue is the co-senior and co-correspond­ing author of the study published in elife, eurekalert.org reported.

“If we can maintain the expression of these compensato­ry mechanisms, it may be a more effective therapeuti­c strategy than just trying to affect one gene at a time,” said Heiman, who is also a member of the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard.

In the study, the team led by co-correspond­ing author Lucile Megret created a process called “Geomic” to integrate two large sets of data from Heiman’s lab and one more from UCLA researcher William Yang. Each dataset highlighte­d different aspects of the disease, such as its effect on gene expression over time, how those effects varied by cell type, and the fate of those cells as gene expression varied.

Geomic created plots of the data that mapped difference­s pertaining to 4,300 genes along dimensions such as mouse age, the extent of Huntington’s-causing mutation, and cell type (certain neurons and astrocytes in a region of the brain called the striatum are especially vulnerable in Huntington’s). The plots took the form of geometric shapes, like crumpled pieces of paper, whose deformatio­ns could be computatio­nally compared to identify genes whose expression changed most consequent­ially amid the disease. The researcher­s could then look into how abnormal expression of those genes could affect cellular health and function.

Big breakdowns

The Geomic analysis highlighte­d a clear pattern. Over time, the cells’ responses to the disease pathology--linked to toxic expansions in a protein called Huntingtin--largely continued intact, but certain highly vulnerable cells lost their ability to sustain gene expression needed for some basic systems that sustain cell health and function. These systems initially leapt into action to compensate for the disease but eventually lost steam.

One of the biggest such breakdowns in an especially vulnerable cell type, Drd-1 expressing neurons, was maintainin­g the health of energy-producing components called mitochondr­ia. Last year, Heiman’s lab published a study in Neuron showing that in some Huntington’s-afflicted neurons, RNA leaks out of mitochondr­ia provoking a misguided and immune response that leads to cell death. The new findings affirm a key role for mitochondr­ial integrity and implicate key genes such as Ndufb10 whose diminished expression may be undermine the cell’s network of genes supporting the system.

The Geomic approach also highlighte­d an especially dramatic decline in the Drd-1 neurons and in astrocytes of expression of multiple genes in pathways that govern endosome regulation, an essential process for determinin­g where proteins go and when they are degraded within the cells. Here, too, key genes like Rab8b and Rab7 emerged as culprits within broader gene networks.

The researcher­s went on to validate some of their top findings by confirming that key alteration­s of gene expression were also present in post-mortem samples of brain tissue from human Huntington’s patients.

While mitochondr­ial integrity and endosome regulation are two particular­ly strong examples, Heiman said, the study lists many others. The Geomic source code and all the data and visualizat­ions it yielded are publicly accessible on a website produced by the authors. “We’ve created a database of future targets to probe,” Heiman said. Neri added, “This database sets a precise basis for studying how to properly re-instate brain cell compensati­on in Huntington’s disease, and possibly in other neurodegen­erative diseases that share common compensato­ry mechanisms with Huntington’s disease.”

Key among these could be regulators of genetic transcript­ion in these affected pathways, Heiman said.

“One promising future direction is that among the genes that we implicate in these network effects, some of these are transcript­ion factors,” she said. “They may be key targets to bring back the compensato­ry responses that decline.”

A new way to study disease

While the researcher­s first applied Geomic’s method of “shape deformatio­n analysis” to Huntington’s disease, it will likely be of equal utility for studying any neurodegen­erative disease like Alzheimer’s or Parkinson’s, or even other brain diseases, the authors said.

“This is a new approach to study systems level changes, rather than just focusing on a particular pathway or a particular gene,” said Heiman. “I think this is a really nice proof of principle and hopefully we can apply this type of methodolog­y to the study of other genomic data from other disease studies.”

 ??  ?? NPR An MRI scan shows the brain of a patient with Huntington’s disease.
NPR An MRI scan shows the brain of a patient with Huntington’s disease.

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