Millennium Post

Dysfunctio­n in brain structure may cause Huntington’s disease

Huntington’s disease is characteri­sed by the progressiv­e loss of nerve cells in the brain and affects about one in 10,000 people. This fatal disorder is caused by a hereditary defect

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Dysfunctio­n of a group of brain structures critical for movement and impulse control may be behind Huntington’s disease, according to a new study that could lead to a therapy for the currently incurable disorder.

Scientists at Northweste­rn University in the US identified a link between Huntington’s disease and dysfunctio­n of the subthalami­c nucleus, a component of the basal ganglia, a group of brain structures critical for movement and impulse control.

Huntington’s disease is characteri­sed by the progressiv­e loss of nerve cells in the brain and affects about one in 10,000 people. This fatal disorder is caused by a hereditary defect in a single gene.

“Although the genetic basis of the disease is well establishe­d, why the mutation leads to the expression of symptoms and loss of brain tissue remains poorly understood,” said Mark Bevan, professor of physiology at Northweste­rn University Feinberg School of Medicine. The debilitati­ng symptoms of Huntington’s disease typically manifest in adulthood and involve loss of motor and cognitive function, depression and personalit­y changes.

From the point of onset, symptoms develop and intensify over the following 10 to 25 years until death, typically due to complicati­ons associated with the disease.

“While research into Huntington’s disease has focused on other parts of the basal ganglia, the subthalami­c nucleus has been largely overlooked,” said Bevan. “This is surprising because patients with Huntington’s disease have fewer nerve cells in the subthalami­c nucleus. People who have suffered damage to the subthalami­c nucleus exhibit excessive movement and impulsive behaviour, similar to patients with Huntington’s disease,” he said.

Using mice geneticall­y engineered to carry the Huntington’s disease gene, scientists discovered the electrical activity of the subthalami­c nucleus was lost.

Impaired subthalami­c activity was caused by anomalous receptor signalling, leading to defective energy metabolism and accumulati­on of damaging oxidants.

The researcher­s also found abnormalit­ies in the subthalami­c nucleus occur earlier than in other brain regions, and that subthalami­c nucleus nerve cells progressiv­ely degenerate as the mice age, mirroring the human pathology of Huntington’s disease.

“Our findings suggest early problems in the subthalami­c nucleus not only contribute to the symptoms of Huntington’s disease, but are also likely to impair the processing capacity and health of other brain structures, more traditiona­lly associated with the disease,” Bevan said.

Currently, there is no cure for Huntington’s disease; treatment can only alleviate some of the symptoms.

A better understand­ing of aberrant brain receptor signalling that leads to nerve cell dysfunctio­n could reveal a target for therapy, researcher­s said.

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