Single-step detection of mutant huntingtin in animal and human tissues: a bioassay for Huntington's disease

A Weiss, D Abramowski, M Bibel, R Bodner… - Analytical …, 2009 - Elsevier
A Weiss, D Abramowski, M Bibel, R Bodner, V Chopra, M DiFiglia, J Fox, K Kegel, C Klein…
Analytical biochemistry, 2009Elsevier
The genetic mutation causing Huntington's disease is a polyglutamine expansion in the
huntingtin protein where more than 37 glutamines cause disease by formation of toxic
intracellular fragments, aggregates, and cell death. Despite a clear pathogenic role for
mutant huntingtin, understanding huntingtin expression during the presymptomatic phase of
the disease or during disease progression has remained obscure. Central to clarifying the
role in the pathomechanism of disease is the ability to easily and accurately measure mutant …
The genetic mutation causing Huntington’s disease is a polyglutamine expansion in the huntingtin protein where more than 37 glutamines cause disease by formation of toxic intracellular fragments, aggregates, and cell death. Despite a clear pathogenic role for mutant huntingtin, understanding huntingtin expression during the presymptomatic phase of the disease or during disease progression has remained obscure. Central to clarifying the role in the pathomechanism of disease is the ability to easily and accurately measure mutant huntingtin in accessible human tissue samples as well as cell and animal models. Here we describe a highly sensitive time-resolved Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) assay for quantification of soluble mutant huntingtin in brain, plasma, and cerebrospinal fluid. Surprisingly, in mice, soluble huntingtin levels decrease during disease progression, inversely correlating with brain aggregate load. Mutant huntingtin is easily detected in human brain and blood-derived fractions, providing a utility to assess mutant huntingtin expression during disease course as well as a pharmacodynamic marker for disease-modifying therapeutics targeting expression, cleavage, or degradation of mutant huntingtin. The design of the homogeneous one-step method for huntingtin detection is such that it can be easily applied to measure other proteins of interest.
Elsevier