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Home › Dataset Library › Transcription profiling of mouse striatum from 3- and 18-month-old Q92 vs. control animals

Dataset: Transcription profiling of mouse striatum from 3- and 18-month-old Q92 vs. control animals

Achieving a mechanistic understanding of disease and initiating preclinical therapeutic trials necessitate the study of huntingtin...

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Achieving a mechanistic understanding of disease and initiating preclinical therapeutic trials necessitate the study of huntingtin toxicity and its remedy in model systems. To allow the engagement of appropriate experimental paradigms, Huntington’s disease (HD) models need to be validated in terms of how they recapitulate a particular aspect of human disease. In order to examine transcriptome-related effects of mutant huntingtin, we compared striatal mRNA profiles from seven genetic mouse models of disease to that of postmortem human HD caudate using microarray analysis. Transgenic models expressing short N-terminal fragments of mutant huntingtin (R6/1 and R6/2 mice) exhibited the most rapid effects on gene expression, consistent with previous studies. Although changes in the brains of knock-in models of HD took longer to appear, 15-month and 22-month CHL2Q150/Q150, 18-month HdhQ92/Q92 and 2-year-old YAC128 animals also exhibited significant HD-like mRNA signatures. When the affected genes were compared across models, a robust concordance was observed. Importantly, changes concordant across multiple lines mice were also in excellent agreement with the mRNA changes seen in human HD caudate. Although it was expected that the expression of full-length huntingtin transprotein might result in unique gene expression changes compared to those caused by expression of an N-terminal huntingtin fragment, no discernable differences between full-length and fragment models were detected. There was, however, an overall concordance between transcriptomic signature and disease stage. We thus conclude that the transcriptional changes of HD can be modelled in several available lines of transgenic mice, comprising lines expressing both N-terminal and full-length mutant huntingtin proteins. The combined analysis of mouse and human HD transcriptomes provides an important chronology of mutant huntingtin's gene expression effects. Experiment Overall Design: Striatal samples from 6 Q92 mutant mice (3 3-month-old and 3 18-month-old) and 6 age-matched wild-type mice.

Species:
mouse

Samples:
12

Source:
E-GEOD-7958

PubMed:
17519223

Updated:
Dec.12, 2014

Registered:
Nov.18, 2014


Factors: (via ArrayExpress)
Sample
GSE7958GSM197115
GSE7958GSM197118
GSE7958GSM197119
GSE7958GSM197122
GSE7958GSM197123
GSE7958GSM197124
GSE7958GSM197116
GSE7958GSM197117
GSE7958GSM197114
GSE7958GSM197120
GSE7958GSM197121
GSE7958GSM197125

Tags

  • disease

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