SUMO modification of Huntingtin and Huntington's disease pathology

JS Steffan, N Agrawal, J Pallos, E Rockabrand… - Science, 2004 - science.org
JS Steffan, N Agrawal, J Pallos, E Rockabrand, LC Trotman, N Slepko, K Illes, T Lukacsovich…
Science, 2004science.org
Huntington's disease (HD) is characterized by the accumulation of a pathogenic protein,
Huntingtin (Htt), that contains an abnormal polyglutamine expansion. Here, we report that a
pathogenic fragment of Htt (Httex1p) can be modified either by small ubiquitin-like modifier
(SUMO)–1 or by ubiquitin on identical lysine residues. In cultured cells, SUMOylation
stabilizes Httex1p, reduces its ability to form aggregates, and promotes its capacity to
repress transcription. In a Drosophila model of HD, SUMOylation of Httex1p exacerbates …
Huntington's disease (HD) is characterized by the accumulation of a pathogenic protein, Huntingtin (Htt), that contains an abnormal polyglutamine expansion. Here, we report that a pathogenic fragment of Htt (Httex1p) can be modified either by small ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO)–1 or by ubiquitin on identical lysine residues. In cultured cells, SUMOylation stabilizes Httex1p, reduces its ability to form aggregates, and promotes its capacity to repress transcription. In a Drosophila model of HD, SUMOylation of Httex1p exacerbates neurodegeneration, whereas ubiquitination of Httex1p abrogates neurodegeneration. Lysine mutations that prevent both SUMOylation and ubiquitination of Httex1p reduce HD pathology, indicating that the contribution of SUMOylation to HD pathology extends beyond preventing Htt ubiquitination and degradation.
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