AI Article Synopsis

  • Huntington's disease (HD) is primarily known for its movement issues, but cognitive impairments actually appear around 15 years earlier.
  • Research indicates a link between the Huntingtin protein (Htt) and KCC2, a protein essential for proper brain inhibition, suggesting that KCC2 dysfunction may worsen learning and memory problems in HD.
  • In experiments with HD mice, a reduction in KCC2 alongside an increase in another protein (NKCC1) led to unwanted excitatory effects from GABA, but using the NKCC1 inhibitor bumetanide improved cognitive performance in the mice.

Article Abstract

Huntington's disease (HD) is classically characterized as a movement disorder, however cognitive impairments precede the motor symptoms by ∼15 y. Based on proteomic and bioinformatic data linking the Huntingtin protein (Htt) and KCC2, which is required for hyperpolarizing GABAergic inhibition, and the important role of inhibition in learning and memory, we hypothesized that aberrant KCC2 function contributes to the hippocampal-associated learning and memory deficits in HD. We discovered that Htt and KCC2 interact in the hippocampi of wild-type and R6/2-HD mice, with a decrease in KCC2 expression in the hippocampus of R6/2 and YAC128 mice. The reduced expression of the Cl-extruding cotransporter KCC2 is accompanied by an increase in the Cl-importing cotransporter NKCC1, which together result in excitatory GABA in the hippocampi of HD mice. NKCC1 inhibition by the FDA-approved NKCC1 inhibitor bumetanide abolished the excitatory action of GABA and rescued the performance of R6/2 mice on hippocampal-associated behavioral tests.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5816181PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1716871115DOI Listing

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