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Overexpression of heat shock protein 70 in R6 / 2 Huntington’s disease mice has only modest effects on disease progression (2003)

Abstract
Huntington’s disease (HD) is a neurodegenerative disorder caused by expansion of a polyglutamine tract in a protein called huntingtin. The inducible form of heat shock protein 70 (Hsp70) has been shown to reduce polyglutamine-induced toxicity. To investigate if overexpression of Hsp70 can affect disease progression in a mouse model of HD, we crossed R6 / 2 mice, expressing exon 1 of the HD gene with an expanded CAG repeat, with mice overexpressing Hsp70 (both types of transgenic mice were of the CBAxC57BL / 6 strain). The resulting R6 / 2-Hsp70 transgenics exhibited 5- to 15-fold increases in Hsp70 expression in neocortical, hippocampal and basal ganglia regions. This correlated with a delayed loss of body weight compared to R6 / 2 mice. However, the number or size of nuclear inclusions, the loss of brain weight, reduction of striatal volume, reduction in size of striatal projection neurons, downregulation of DARPP-32, development of paw clasping phenotype and early death of the mice were not affected by Hsp70 overexpression. Interestingly, the polyglutamine protein affected the potential rescuing agent, because in older R6 / 2-Hsp70 mice a large proportion of the Hsp70 protein was sequestrated in nuclear inclusions.

Publication details
Download http://kops.ub.uni-konstanz.de/volltexte/2009/8232/
Publisher Universität Konstanz, Fachbereich Biologie. Fachbereich Biologie
Repository University of Konstanz, GERMANY, KOPS (Germany)
Keywords Huntington’s disease, Inclusion, Heat shock protein 70 (Hsp70), Chaperone, Transgenic, Mouse, Life sciences
Type Article
Language eng