Toward an Understanding of Polyglutamine Neurodegeneration
- 5 April 2000
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Brain Pathology
- Vol. 10 (2) , 293-299
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1750-3639.2000.tb00263.x
Abstract
Polyglutamine expansion is now recognized to be a major cause of inherited human neurodegenerative disease. The polyglutamine expansion diseases identified so far are slowly progressive disorders in which distinct yet overlapping brain regions are selectively vulnerable to degeneration. Despite their clinical differences these diseases likely share a common pathogenic mechanism, occurring at the protein level and centered on an abnormal conformation of expanded polyglutamine in the respective disease proteins. Recently there has been remarkable progress in our understanding of polyglutamine disease, but still there are many unanswered questions. In this review, I first outline some of the shared features of polyglutamine diseases and then discuss several issues relevant to an understanding of pathogenesis, paying particular attention to possible mechanisms of neurotoxicity.Keywords
This publication has 42 references indexed in Scilit:
- Protein Fate in Neurodegenerative Proteinopathies: Polyglutamine Diseases Join the (Mis)FoldAmerican Journal of Human Genetics, 1999
- Kennedy's DiseaseJournal of Neurochemistry, 1999
- Recruitment and the Role of Nuclear Localization in Polyglutamine-mediated AggregationThe Journal of cell biology, 1998
- Caspase-3 Cleaves the Expanded Androgen Receptor Protein of Spinal and Bulbar Muscular Atrophy in a Polyglutamine Repeat Length-Dependent MannerBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1998
- Length of huntingtin and its polyglutamine tract influences localization and frequency of intracellular aggregatesNature Genetics, 1998
- Aggregation of Huntingtin in Neuronal Intranuclear Inclusions and Dystrophic Neurites in BrainScience, 1997
- Exon 1 of the HD Gene with an Expanded CAG Repeat Is Sufficient to Cause a Progressive Neurological Phenotype in Transgenic MiceCell, 1996
- Cleavage of huntingtin by apopain, a proapoptotic cysteine protease, is modulated by the polyglutamine tractNature Genetics, 1996
- Expanded polyglutamine in the Machado–Joseph disease protein induces cell death in vitro and in vivoNature Genetics, 1996
- Polyglutamine expansion as a pathological epitope in Huntington's disease and four dominant cerebellar ataxiasNature, 1995