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Allelic series of Huntington's disease knock-in mice reveals expression discorrelates.

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Peer-reviewed

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Article

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Authors

Kumar, Ashish 
Zhang, Jennifer 
Tallaksen-Greene, Sara 
Crowley, Michael R 
Crossman, David K 

Abstract

Identifying molecular drivers of pathology provides potential therapeutic targets. Differentiating between drivers and coincidental molecular alterations presents a major challenge. Variation unrelated to pathology further complicates transcriptomic, proteomic and metabolomic studies which measure large numbers of individual molecules. To overcome these challenges towards the goal of determining drivers of Huntington's disease (HD), we generated an allelic series of HD knock-in mice with graded levels of phenotypic severity for comparison with molecular alterations. RNA-sequencing analysis of this series reveals high numbers of transcripts with level alterations that do not correlate with phenotypic severity. These discorrelated molecular changes are unlikely to be drivers of pathology allowing an exclusion-based strategy to provide a short list of driver candidates. Further analysis of the data shows that a majority of transcript level changes in HD knock-in mice involve alteration of the rate of mRNA processing and/or degradation rather than solely being due to alteration of transcription rate. The overall strategy described can be applied to assess the influence of any molecular change on pathology for diseases where different mutations cause graded phenotypic severity.

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Keywords

Alleles, Animals, Disease Models, Animal, Gene Expression Regulation, Gene Knock-In Techniques, Humans, Huntington Disease, Mice, Phenotype, RNA, Messenger, Sequence Analysis, RNA

Journal Title

Hum Mol Genet

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Journal ISSN

0964-6906
1460-2083

Volume Title

25

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)
Sponsorship
This work was supported by grants from the CHDI, Inc. (P.D., A.J.M.) and the National Institutes of Health (NS062216 to P.D., NS071168 to M.L., NS059537 to R.L.A., P30 NS47466 to T.vG., CA13148 to M.R.C. and D.K.C. and CFAR AI027767 to M.R.C and D.K.C.).