(Press-News.org) Amsterdam, NL, 7 January 2013 – Scientists have wrestled to understand why Huntington's disease, which is caused by a single gene mutation, can produce such variable symptoms. An authoritative review by a group of leading experts summarizes the progress relating cell loss in the striatum and cerebral cortex to symptom profile in Huntington's disease, suggesting a possible direction for developing targeted therapies. The article is published in the latest issue of the Journal of Huntington's Disease.
Huntington's disease (HD) is an inherited progressive neurological disorder for which there is presently no cure. It is caused by a dominant mutation in the HD gene leading to expression of mutant huntingtin (HTT) protein. Expression of mutant HTT causes subtle changes in cellular functions, which ultimately results in jerking, uncontrollable movements, progressive psychiatric difficulties, and loss of mental abilities.
Although it is caused by a single gene, there are major variations in the symptoms of HD. The pattern of symptoms shown by each individual during the course of the disease can differ considerably and present as varying degrees of movement distrubances, cognitive decline, and mood and behavioral changes. Disease duration is typically between ten and twenty years.
Recent investigations have focused on what the presence of the defective gene does to various structures in the brain and understanding the relationship between changes in the brain and the variability in symptom profiles in Huntington's disease.
Analyses of post-mortem human HD tissue suggest that the variation in clinical symptoms in HD is strongly associated with the variable pattern of neurodegeneration in two major regions of the brain, the striatum and the cerebral cortex. The neurodegeneration of the striatum generally follows an ordered and topographical distribution, but comparison of post-mortem human HD tissue and in vivo neuroimaging techniques reveal that the disease produces a striking bilateral atrophy of the striatum, which in these recent studies has been found to be highly variable.
"What is especially interesting is that recent findings suggest that the pattern of striatal cell death shows regional differences between cases in the functionally and neurochemically distinct striosomal and matrix compartments of the striatum which correspond with symptom variation," says author Richard L.M. Faull, MB, ChB, PhD, DSc, Director of the Centre for Brain Research, University of Auckland, New Zealand.
"Our own recent detailed quantitative study using stereological cell counting in the post-mortem human HD cortex has complemented and expanded the neuroimaging studies by providing a cortical cellular basis of symptom heterogeneity in HD," continues Dr Faull. "In particular, HD cases which were dominated by motor dysfunction showed a major total cell loss (28% loss) in the primary motor cortex but no cell loss in the limbic cingulate cortex, whereas cases where mood symptoms predominated showed a total of 54% neuronal loss in the limbic cingulate cortex but no cell loss in the motor cortex. This suggests that the variable neuronal loss and alterations in the circuitry of the primary motor cortex and anterior cingulate cortex associated with the variable compartmental pattern of cell degeneration in the striatum contribute to the differential impairments of motor and mood functions in HD."
The authors note that there are still questions to be answered in the field of HD pathology, such as, how and when pathological neuronal loss occurs; whether the progressive loss of neurons in the striatum is the primary process or is consequential to cortical cell dysfunction; and how these changes relate to symptom profiles.
"What is clear however is that the diverse symptoms of HD patients appear to relate to the heterogeneity of cell loss in both the striatum and cerebral cortex," the authors conclude. "While there is currently no cure, this contemporary evidence suggests that possible genetic therapies aimed at HD gene silencing should be directed towards intervention at both the cerebral cortex and the striatum in the human brain. This poses challenging problems requiring the application of gene silencing therapies to quite widespread regions of the forebrain which may be assisted via CSF delivery systems using gene suppression agents that cross the CSF/brain barrier."
### END
Cell loss in the brain relates to variations in individual symptoms in Huntington's disease
New Journal of Huntington's Disease article suggests therapies should target cerebral cortex and striatum
2013-01-07
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
New compound overcomes drug-resistant Staph infection in mice
2013-01-07
CHAMPAIGN, lll. — Researchers have discovered a new compound that restores the health of mice infected with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), an otherwise dangerous bacterial infection. The new compound targets an enzyme not found in human cells but which is essential to bacterial survival.
The research team, led by scientists at the University of Illinois and the University of California, San Diego, reports the new findings in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The team discovered and developed several compounds that are promising ...
Targeting use of acid-suppressants in hospital patients
2013-01-07
Gastrointestinal bleeds which occur in the hospital, although rare, are a significant source of morbidity and mortality when they occur. Currently, the prophylactic use of acid-suppressive medication in non-critically ill patients in the hospital is not widely recommended. Despite this, these medications continue to be widely utilized for this purpose.
Shoshana Herzig from the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Massachusetts, USA, and her colleagues believe that there is a group of patients whose risk of gastrointestinal bleeds is high enough to warrant the routine ...
Modern parenting may hinder brain development, research shows
2013-01-07
Social practices and cultural beliefs of modern life are preventing healthy brain and emotional development in children, according to an interdisciplinary body of research presented recently at a symposium at the University of Notre Dame.
"Life outcomes for American youth are worsening, especially in comparison to 50 years ago," says Darcia Narvaez, Notre Dame professor of psychology who specializes in moral development in children and how early life experiences can influence brain development.
"Ill-advised practices and beliefs have become commonplace in our culture, ...
Wide binary stars can wreak havoc in planetary systems
2013-01-07
An international team of astrophysicists has shown that planetary systems with very distant binary stars are particularly susceptible to violent disruptions, more so than if the systems had two stellar companions with tighter orbits around each other.
The team, led by Northwestern University's Nathan Kaib, conducted 3,000 computer simulations to study the effects of binary stellar companions (some with tight orbits around each other and others with wide or distant orbits) on the formation and evolution of planetary systems.
The researchers found that wide binary stars ...
Combating USDA's top-ranked invasive insect
2013-01-07
This press release is available in Spanish.
First detected in the United States a decade ago, the brown marmorated stink bug (BMSB) is now in at least 39 states, is wreaking havoc in homes and gardens, and is a major economic threat to orchard fruits, garden vegetables and row crops. It's no wonder the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) ranks this pest as its top "invasive insect of interest."
But help may be on the way: USDA scientists at the Agricultural Research Service (ARS) Invasive Insect Biocontrol and Behavior Laboratory in Beltsville, Md., are searching ...
Study provides guidance for use of acid-suppressive medications in hospital patients
2013-01-07
BOSTON -- Critically ill patients in hospital intensive care units (ICUs) are routinely prescribed acid-suppressive medications to reduce their risk of developing stress ulcers and gastrointestinal bleeding, both of which can result from being in a stressful environment and from being intubated. Over the years, this routine practice has often been extended to patients outside the ICU, despite a lack of evidence that this population is at significant risk of these complications.
Now a study led by investigators at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) describes ...
Psychological common ground could ease tensions among those with different religious beliefs
2013-01-07
Understanding how thoughts of mortality influence individuals' beliefs sheds light on the commonalities among different groups' motivations and could help ease tensions between opposing viewpoints, according to University of Missouri experiments that tested the relationship between awareness of death and belief in a higher power. The study found that thoughts of death increased atheists, Christians, Muslims and agnostics conviction in their own world views. For example, contrary to the wartime aphorism that there are no atheists in foxholes, thoughts of death did not cause ...
Cognitive deficits from concussions still present after 2 months
2013-01-07
EUGENE, Ore. -- (Jan. 7, 2013) -- The ability to focus and switch tasks readily amid distractions was compromised for up to two months following brain concussions suffered by high school athletes, according to a study at the University of Oregon.
Research team members, in an interview, said the discovery suggests that some athletes may need longer recovery periods than current practices dictate to lower the risk of subsequent concussions. Conventional wisdom, said lead author David Howell, a graduate student in the UO Department of Human Physiology, has typical recovery ...
Detrimental effect of obesity on lesions associated with Alzheimer's disease
2013-01-07
In France, more than 860,000 people suffer from Alzheimer's disease and related disorders, making them the largest cause of age-related loss of intellectual function. Cognitive impairments observed in Alzheimer's disease result from the accumulation of abnormal tau proteins in nerve cells undergoing degeneration . We know that obesity, a major risk factor in the development of insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes, increases the risk of dementia during the aging process. However, the effects of obesity on 'Taupathies' (i.e. tau protein-related disorders), including Alzheimer's ...
Penn study shows mountains are only minor contributors to erosion and climate regulation
2013-01-07
PHILADELPHIA — Though churning smokestacks, cud-chewing cows and gasoline-burning vehicles are contributing constantly to greenhouse gas emissions, there are also many processes that do the reverse, pulling molecules like carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere. One of these is chemical weathering, which occurs when rock turns into soil. Carbon dioxide molecules and rain combine to dissolve rock, and the weathering products, including sediment, eventually make their way through waterways to the ocean where some become trapped on the ocean bottom and in coral reefs and seashells.
For ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
CRF announces TCT 2025 late-breaking clinical trials and science
Ancient DNA reveals farming spread through migration, locals slow to adopt it
Researchers turn mouse scalp transparent to image brain development
New research reveals longevity gains slowing, life expectancy of 100 unlikely
Wheat that makes its own fertilizer
Certain communities of pond plants may increase greenhouse gases
Hormone therapy type matters for memory performance after menopause
Stroke risk highest among Native Hawaiian, Pacific Islander people
Scientists reveal warped protoplanetary discs, reshaping ideas about how planets form
Be it feast or famine, orangutans adapt with flexible diets
Insomnia patients report better sleep when taking cannabis-based medical products
Intrusive distracting thoughts may be associated with anxiety and linked to lower well-being, and occur more often when alone than in company
New crocodile-relative “hypercarnivore” from prehistoric Patagonia was 11.5ft long and weighed 250kg
“Unhappiness hump” in aging may have disappeared worldwide
Breathwork can induce altered states of consciousness linked with changes in brain blood flow
New research makes first broad-spectrum antiviral
Good sleep quality might be key for better mental wellbeing in young adults
One step closer to improving ER+ breast cancer patients’ response to therapy
Scientists reveal the first structure of the complete botulinum neurotoxin complex
Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia researchers link dietary fats to more severe form of asthma
Rising temperatures intensify "supercell thunderstorms" in Europe
New Hebrew SeniorLife affordable senior housing building achieves Phius Certification
Overworked brain cells may burn out in Parkinson’s disease
One in seven bariatric surgery patients turn to new weight loss drugs
A nonsurgical path to treating pelvic organ prolapse
Electrons reveal their handedness in attosecond flashes
Research implicates biomolecular condensates in a type of childhood brain cancer
AUF1 protein plays anti-aging role by regulating cellular metabolism
How Iceland’s fiery mantle plume scattered ancient volcanoes across the North Atlantic
Many patients with advanced cancer feel their treatment is not aligned with their personal care goals
[Press-News.org] Cell loss in the brain relates to variations in individual symptoms in Huntington's diseaseNew Journal of Huntington's Disease article suggests therapies should target cerebral cortex and striatum