Neurobiology of Disease (Jul 2011)

Identification of anti-inflammatory targets for Huntington's disease using a brain slice-based screening assay

  • Peter H. Reinhart,
  • Linda S. Kaltenbach,
  • Christian Essrich,
  • Denise E. Dunn,
  • Joshua A. Eudailey,
  • C. Todd DeMarco,
  • Gregory J. Turmel,
  • Jennifer C. Whaley,
  • Andrew Wood,
  • Seongeun Cho,
  • Donald C. Lo

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 43, no. 1
pp. 248 – 256

Abstract

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Huntington's disease (HD) is a late-onset, neurodegenerative disease for which there are currently no cures nor disease-modifying treatments. Here we report the identification of several potential anti-inflammatory targets for HD using an ex vivo model of HD that involves the acute transfection of human mutant huntingtin-based constructs into rat brain slices. This model recapitulates key components of the human disease, including the formation of intracellular huntingtin protein (HTT)-containing inclusions and the progressive neurodegeneration of striatal neurons—both occurring within the native tissue context of these neurons. Using this “high-throughput biology” screening platform, we conducted a hypothesis-neutral screen of a collection of drug-like compounds which identified several anti-inflammatory targets that provided neuroprotection against HTT fragment-induced neurodegeneration. The nature of these targets provide further support for non-cell autonomous mechanisms mediating significant aspects of neuropathogenesis induced by mutant HTT fragment proteins.

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