articleCellJan 16, 2025HYBRID OA

Long somatic DNA-repeat expansion drives neurodegeneration in Huntington’s disease

Broad Institute · McLean Hospital

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

In the huntingtin (HTT) gene leads to neurodegeneration after decades of biological latency. We developed a single-cell method for measuring this repeat's length alongside genome-wide RNA expression. We found that the HTT CAG repeat expands somatically from 40-45 to 100-500+ CAGs in SPNs. Somatic expansion from 40 to 150 CAGs had no apparent cell-autonomous effect, but SPNs with 150-500+ CAGs lost positive and then negative features of neuronal identity, de-repressed senescence/apoptosis genes, and were lost. Our results suggest that somatic repeat expansion beyond 150 CAGs causes SPNs to degenerate quickly and asynchronously. We conclude that in HD, at any one time, most neurons have an innocuous but unstable…

Citation impact

156
total citations
FWCI
108.62
Percentile
100%
References
80
Citations per year

Authors

18

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Biology
  • Neurodegeneration
  • Huntington's disease
  • Somatic cell
  • Genetics
  • Trinucleotide repeat expansion
  • Disease
  • DNA
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