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Vanessa C. Wheeler, Jacqueline K. White, Claire-Anne Gutekunst, Vladimir Vrbanac, Meredith Weaver, Xiao-Jiang Li, Shi-Hua Li, Hong Yi, Jean-Paul Vonsattel, James F. Gusella, Steven Hersch, Wojtek Auerbach, Alexandra L. Joyner, Marcy E. MacDonald, Long glutamine tracts cause nuclear localization of a novel form of huntingtin in medium spiny striatal neurons in HdhQ92 and HdhQ111 knock-in mice, Human Molecular Genetics, Volume 9, Issue 4, 1 March 2000, Pages 503–513, https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/9.4.503
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Huntington’s disease (HD) is caused by an expanded N-terminal glutamine tract that endows huntingtin with a striatal-selective structural property ultimately toxic to medium spiny neurons. In precise genetic models of juvenile HD, HdhQ92 and HdhQ111 knock-in mice, long polyglutamine segments change huntingtin’s physical properties, producing HD-like in vivo correlates in the striatum, including nuclear localization of a version of the full-length protein predominant in medium spiny neurons, and subsequent formation of N-terminal inclusions and insoluble aggregate. These changes show glutamine length dependence and dominant inheritance with recruitment of wild-type protein, critical features of the altered HD property that strongly implicate them in the HD disease process and that suggest alternative pathogenic scenarios: the effect of the glutamine tract may act by altering interaction with a critical cellular constituent or by depleting a form of huntingtin essential to medium spiny striatal neurons.