Overactivation of NMDA receptors (NMDARs) is believed to play a role in degeneration of striatal medium-sized spiny neurons (MSNs) in Huntington's disease (HD). This hereditary disorder is caused by an expansion Ͼ35 in the polyglutamine (polyQ) region of the protein huntingtin (htt). Previous work has shown that NMDAR current, calcium signaling, and/or toxicity are enhanced in striatal MSNs in a variety of transgenic mice and cellular models of HD, but whether the enhancement is specific for MSNs or correlated with mutant htt (mhtt) polyQ length is not known. Furthermore, the mechanism underlying the increase in NMDAR activity has not been elucidated. Here we report polyQ length-dependent enhancement of peak NMDAR current density by mhtt in cultured MSNs, but not cortical neurons, from the yeast artificial chromosome (YAC) transgenic HD mouse model. We also observed a shift of NMDAR subunits NR1 and NR2B from internal pools to the plasma membrane and a significantly faster rate of NMDAR insertion to the surface in YAC72 MSNs. In comparing YAC72 with wild-type striatal tissue, subcellular fractionation revealed a relative enrichment of NR1 C2Ј-containing NMDARs in the vesicle/microsome-enriched fraction, and coimmunoprecipitation experiments demonstrated an increased proportion of NR1 C2Ј isoforms associated with NR2 subunits, which may contribute to faster forward trafficking of these receptors. Our results suggest that altered NMDAR trafficking may underlie potentiation of NMDAR-mediated current and toxicity in the YAC72 HD mouse model. This polyQ length-dependent, neuronal-specific change in NMDAR activity induced by mhtt may contribute to selective neuronal degeneration in HD.
In Huntington's disease (HD), the mutant huntingtin (mhtt) protein is associated with striatal dysfunction and degeneration. Excitotoxicity and early synaptic defects are attributed, in part, to altered NMDA receptor (NMDAR) trafficking and function. Deleterious extrasynaptic NMDAR localization and signalling are increased early in yeast artificial chromosome mice expressing full-length mhtt with 128 polyglutamine repeats (YAC128 mice). NMDAR trafficking at the plasma membrane is regulated by dephosphorylation of the NMDAR subunit GluN2B tyrosine 1472 (Y1472) residue by STriatal-Enriched protein tyrosine Phosphatase (STEP). NMDAR function is also regulated by calpain cleavage of the GluN2B C-terminus. Activation of both STEP and calpain is calcium-dependent, and disruption of calcium homeostasis occurs early in the HD striatum. Here, we show increased calpain cleavage of GluN2B at both synaptic and extrasynaptic sites, and elevated extrasynaptic total GluN2B expression in the YAC128 striatum. Calpain inhibition significantly reduced extrasynaptic GluN2B expression in the YAC128 but not wild-type striatum. Furthermore, calpain inhibition reduced whole-cell NMDAR current and the surface/internal GluN2B ratio in co-cultured striatal neurons, without affecting synaptic GluN2B localization. Synaptic STEP activity was also significantly higher in the YAC128 striatum, correlating with decreased GluN2B Y1472 phosphorylation. A substrate-trapping STEP protein (TAT-STEP C-S) significantly increased VGLUT1-GluN2B colocalization, as well as increasing synaptic GluN2B expression and Y1472 phosphorylation. Moreover, combined calpain inhibition and STEP inactivation reduced extrasynaptic, while increasing synaptic GluN2B expression in the YAC128 striatum. These results indicate that increased STEP and calpain activation contribute to altered NMDAR localization in an HD mouse model, suggesting new therapeutic targets for HD.
Evidence suggests that NMDA-type glutamate receptors contribute to degeneration of striatal medium-sized spiny neurons (MSNs) in Huntington's disease (HD). Previously, we demonstrated that NMDA receptor (NMDAR)-mediated current and/or toxicity is increased in MSNs from the yeast artificial chromosome (YAC) transgenic mouse model expressing polyglutamine (polyQ)-expanded (mutant) full-length human huntingtin (htt). Others have shown that membrane-associated guanylate kinases (MAGUKs), such as PSD-95 and SAP102, modulate NMDAR surface expression and excitotoxicity in hippocampal and cortical neurons and that htt interacts with PSD-95. Here, we tested the hypothesis that an altered association between MAGUKs and NMDARs in mutant huntingtin-expressing cells contributes to increased susceptibility to excitotoxicity. We show that htt coimmunoprecipitated with SAP102 in HEK293T cells and striatal tissue from wild-type and YAC transgenic mice; however, the association of SAP102 with htt or the NMDAR NR2B subunit was unaffected by htt polyQ length, whereas association of PSD-95 with NR2B in striatal tissue was enhanced by increased htt polyQ length. Treatment of cultured MSNs with Tat-NR2B9c peptide blocked binding of NR2B with SAP102 and PSD-95 and reduced NMDAR surface expression by 20% in both YAC transgenic and wild-type MSNs, and also restored susceptibility to NMDAR excitoxicity in YAC HD MSNs to levels observed in wild-type MSNs; a similar effect on excitotoxicity was observed after knockdown of PSD-95 by small interfering RNA. Unlike previous findings in cortical and hippocampal neurons, rescue of NMDA toxicity by Tat-NR2B9c occurred independently of any effect on neuronal nitric oxide synthase activity. Our results elucidate further the mechanisms underlying enhanced excitotoxicity in HD.
Huntington disease (HD), caused by CAG expansion in the ubiquitously expressed huntingtin gene, is characterized by early dysfunction and death of striatal medium-sized spiny neurons (MSNs). Previous work has shown MSN-specific alterations in NMDA receptor (NMDAR) expression and cell death signaling. Furthermore, studies in HD human brain tissue and a knock-in mouse model demonstrate increases in calpain activity, which can be stimulated by NMDARs and contribute to excitotoxicity. Here, we report increased calpain activity in MSNs from the yeast artificial chromosome (YAC) transgenic mouse model of HD, expressing human full-length huntingtin with 128 polyglutamine repeats (YAC128), compared with wild type. Moreover, the calpain-cleaved product of NMDAR subunit NR2B is increased early, and NR2B expression levels are reduced, in YAC128 striatum. Although steady-state NMDAR surface expression is similar in wild-type and YAC128 MSNs, the rate of loss of NR2B-containing surface receptors is enhanced in YAC128 MSNs, suggesting that NMDAR forward trafficking to the surface is also faster, as previously reported for YAC72 MSNs. Calpain inhibitor-1 treatment normalized the loss rate of surface NMDARs in YAC128 MSNs to that of wild type, and significantly increased surface NMDAR expression in YAC128, but not in wild type or YAC72. With acute NMDAR overstimulation, the increase in calpain activity correlated with polyglutamine length, and calpain inhibitor treatment reduced NMDA-induced apoptosis in YAC72 and YAC128 MSNs to wild-type levels. Thus, the cumulative effect of increasing huntingtin polyglutamine length is to enhance MSN sensitivity to excitotoxicity at least in part by calpain-mediated cell death signaling.
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