Publication | Open Access
Targeting Gpr52 lowers mutant HTT levels and rescues Huntington’s disease-associated phenotypes
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Citations
38
References
2018
Year
See HuangGeneticsMolecular BiologyNeurochemical BiomarkersDisease Gene IdentificationSynaptic SignalingGpr52 LowersPotential HuntingtonMolecular PharmacologyDegenerative PathologyMolecular NeuroscienceG Protein-coupled ReceptorNeuropharmacologyRescues Huntington ’NeurodegenerationPharmacologyKnocking-out Gpr52Neurodegenerative DiseasesHtt LevelsGenetic DisorderNatural SciencesMedical GeneticsMolecular NeurobiologyMedicineSmall Molecules
See Huang and Gitler (doi:10.1093/brain/awy112) for a scientific commentary on this article.Lowering the levels of disease-causing proteins is an attractive treatment strategy for neurodegenerative disorders, among which Huntington's disease is an appealing disease for testing this strategy because of its monogenetic nature. Huntington's disease is mainly caused by cytotoxicity of the mutant HTT protein with an expanded polyglutamine repeat tract. Lowering the soluble mutant HTT may reduce its downstream toxicity and provide potential treatment for Huntington's disease. This is hard to achieve by small-molecule compound drugs because of a lack of effective targets. Here we demonstrate Gpr52, an orphan G protein-coupled receptor, as a potential Huntington's disease drug target. Knocking-out Gpr52 significantly reduces mutant HTT levels in the striatum and rescues Huntington's disease-associated behavioural phenotypes in a knock-in Huntington's disease mouse model expressing endogenous mutant Htt. Importantly, a novel Gpr52 antagonist E7 reduces mutant HTT levels and rescues Huntington's disease-associated phenotypes in cellular and mouse models. Our study provides an entry point for Huntington's disease drug discovery by targeting Gpr52.
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