Surprise finding sheds light on what causes Huntingtons disease, a devastating fatal brain disorder
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This microscope photo provided by the McLean Hospital's Harvard Brain Tissue Resource Center in January 2024 shows cells in the caudate nucleus structure of the brain in a person with Huntington's disease. (McLean Hospital's Harvard Brain Tissue Resource Center/NIH NeuroBioBank via AP)2025-01-16T16:00:43Z Scientists are unraveling the mystery of what triggers Huntingtons disease, a devastating and fatal hereditary disorder that strikes in the prime of life, causing nerve cells in parts of the brain to break down and die.The genetic mutation linked to Huntingtons has long been known, but scientists havent understood how people could have the mutation from birth, but not develop any problems until later in life. New research shows that the mutation is, surprisingly, harmless for decades. But it quietly grows into a larger mutation until it eventually crosses a threshold, generates toxic proteins, and kills the cells it has expanded in. The conundrum in our field has been: Why do you have a genetic disorder that manifests later in life if the gene is present at conception? said Dr. Mark Mehler, who directs the Institute for Brain Disorders and Neural Regeneration at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine and was not involved in the research. He called the research a landmark study and said it addresses a lot of the issues that have plagued the field for a long time. The brain cell death eventually leads to problems with movement, thinking and behavior. Huntingtons symptoms which include involuntary movement, unsteady gait, personality changes and impaired judgment typically begin between the ages of 30 and 50, gradually worsening over 10 to 25 years.Scientists at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, McLean Hospital in Massachusetts and Harvard Medical School studied brain tissue donated by 53 people with Huntingtons and 50 without it, analyzing half a million cells. They focused on the Huntingtons mutation, which involves a stretch of DNA in a particular gene where a three-letter sequence CAG is repeated at least 40 times. In people without the disease this sequence is repeated just 15 to 35 times. They discovered that DNA tracts with 40 or more such repeats expand over time until they are hundreds of CAGs long. Once CAGs reach a threshold of about 150, certain types of neurons sicken and die. The findings were really surprising, even to us, said Steve McCarroll, a Broad member and co-senior author of the study, which was published Thursday in the journal Cell. The study was partly funded by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, an organization that also supports The Associated Press Health and Science department. The research team estimated that repeat tracts grow slowly during the first two decades of life, then the rate accelerates dramatically when they reach about 80 CAGs.The longer the repeats, the earlier in life the onset will happen, said neuroscience researcher Sabina Berretta, one of the studys senior authors. Researchers acknowledged that some scientists were initially skeptical when results were shared at conferences, since previous work found that repeat expansions in the range of 30 to 100 CAGs were necessary but not sufficient to cause Huntingtons. McCarroll agreed that 100 or fewer CAGs are not sufficient to trigger the disease, but said his study found that expansions with at least 150 CAGs are. Researchers hope their findings can help scientists come up with ways to delay or prevent the incurable condition, which afflicts about 41,000 Americans and is now treated with medications to manage the symptoms.Recently, experimental drugs designed to lower levels of the protein produced by the mutated Huntingtons gene have struggled in trials. The new findings suggest thats because few cells have the toxic version of the protein at any given time.Slowing or stopping the expansion of DNA repeats may be a better way to target the disease, researchers said.Though there are no guarantees this would stave off Huntingtons, McCarroll said many companies are starting or expanding programs to try to do this.---The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institutes Science and Educational Media Group and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content. LAURA UNGAR Ungar covers medicine and science on the APs Global Health and Science team. She has been a health journalist for more than two decades. twitter mailto
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