Publication

Fragile polyQ assemblies cause Golgipathy in Huntington’s disease

October 6, 2024
ActivityScan Assay
Disease Modeling
MaxLab Live
MaxOne
MaxOne Chip
Network Assay
Rare Diseases
Neuronal Cell Cultures
Organoids
Lixiang Ma, Xinyu Chen, Yang Liu, Lijun Dai, Fangzhou Ye, Weiqi Yang, Hada Buhe, Jixin Ma, Chenyun Song, Li Li, Dandan Fan, Fanxun Chen, Haoman Chen, Jianwei Shuai, Jianzhong Su, Hexige Saiyin
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Abstract

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Abstract Huntingtin (HTT) is a naturally aggregating protein that causes Huntington’s disease (HD) when its polyglutamine (polyQ) tract exceeds 38 repeats. Despite its importance, the biology of HTT aggregates remains poorly defined. Utilizing high-resolution imaging of HD family-derived cells, we have redefined polyQ assemblies—formerly viewed as pathogenic aggregates—as dynamic structures resembling knitted-fabric patches. These assemblies encircle the Golgi apparatus, integrating ribbons and stacks to form a functional polyQ assembly-Golgi complex and attaching clathrin vesicles. Mechanistically, we show that the fragmentation of polyQ assemblies is dynamically coupled with mitotic Golgi fragmentation and that treatment with the ARF inhibitor Brefeldin A splits and fragments the complex. The presence of mutant HTT (mHTT) ’crisps’ these assemblies and complexes, altering their response to nutrient deprivation and autophagy enhancers but not to antisense oligonucleotide (ASO) therapy. The polyQ assembly in HD cells also reduces the scaffolding capacity of the Golgi apparatus, clathrin vesicles, and ARF1, impairing Golgi functions. Our results demonstrate that mHTT disrupts the homeostatic dynamics of the polyQ assembly-Golgi complex, inducing a ’Golgipathy’ by crippling Golgi structure and function.