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Home › Dataset Library › A novel approach to investigate tissue-specific trinucleotide repeat instability

Dataset: A novel approach to investigate tissue-specific trinucleotide repeat instability

In Huntington’s disease (HD), an expanded CAG repeat produces characteristic striatal neurodegeneration. Interestingly, the HD CAG...

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In Huntington’s disease (HD), an expanded CAG repeat produces characteristic striatal neurodegeneration. Interestingly, the HD CAG repeat, whose length determines age at onset, undergoes tissue-specific somatic instability, predominant in the striatum, suggesting that tissue-specific CAG length changes could modify the disease process. Therefore, understanding the mechanisms underlying the tissue specificity of somatic instability may provide novel routes to therapies. However progress in this area has been hampered by the lack of sensitive high-throughput instability quantification methods and global approaches to identify the underlying factors. Here we describe a novel approach to gain insight into the factors responsible for the tissue specificity of somatic instability. Using accurate genetic knock-in mouse models of HD, we developed a reliable, high-throughput method to quantify tissue HD CAG instability and integrated this with genome-wide bioinformatic approaches. Using tissue instability quantified in 16 tissues as a phenotype and tissue microarray gene expression as a predictor, we built a mathematical model and identified a gene expression signature that accurately predicted tissue instability. Using the predictive ability of this signature we found that somatic instability was not a consequence of pathogenesis. In support of this, genetic crosses with models of accelerated neuropathology failed to induce somatic instability. In addition, we searched for genes and pathways that correlated with tissue instability. We found that expression levels of DNA repair genes did not explain the tissue specificity of somatic instability. Instead, our data implicate other pathways, particularly cell cycle, metabolism and neurotransmitter pathways, acting in combination to generate tissue-specific patterns of instability. Our study clearly demonstrates that multiple tissue factors reflect the level of somatic instability in different tissues. In addition, our quantitative, genome-wide approach is readily applicable to high-throughput assays and opens the door to widespread applications with the potential to accelerate the discovery of drugs that alter tissue instability. Mouse striatum and cerebellum, 10 weeks old, Affymetrix MG430 2.0 arrays, gcRMA.

Species:
mouse

Samples:
12

Source:
E-GEOD-19780

Updated:
Dec.12, 2014

Registered:
Nov.11, 2014


Factors: (via ArrayExpress)
Sample TISSUE HDH GENOTYPE
GSM229435 striatum Q7/Q7
GSM229435 striatum Q7/Q7
GSM229435 striatum Q7/Q7
GSM229438 striatum Q111/Q111
GSM229438 striatum Q111/Q111
GSM229438 striatum Q111/Q111
GSM229456 cerebellum Q7/Q7
GSM229456 cerebellum Q7/Q7
GSM229456 cerebellum Q7/Q7
GSM229459 cerebellum Q111/Q111
GSM229459 cerebellum Q111/Q111
GSM229459 cerebellum Q111/Q111

Tags

  • cell
  • cerebellum
  • disease
  • genome
  • striatum

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