Selective Vulnerability of Layer 5a Corticostriatal Neurons in Huntington's Disease

The properties of the cell types that are selectively vulnerable in Huntington's disease (HD) cortex, the nature of somatic CAG expansions of in these cells, and their importance in CNS circuitry have not been delineated. Here we employed serial fluorescence activated nuclear sorting (sFANS), d...

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Published inbioRxiv : the preprint server for biology
Main Authors Pressl, Christina, Mätlik, Kert, Kus, Laura, Darnell, Paul, Luo, Ji-Dung, Paul, Matthew R, Weiss, Alison R, Liguore, William, Carroll, Thomas S, Davis, David A, McBride, Jodi, Heintz, Nathaniel
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 19.10.2023
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Summary:The properties of the cell types that are selectively vulnerable in Huntington's disease (HD) cortex, the nature of somatic CAG expansions of in these cells, and their importance in CNS circuitry have not been delineated. Here we employed serial fluorescence activated nuclear sorting (sFANS), deep molecular profiling, and single nucleus RNA sequencing (snRNAseq) to demonstrate that layer 5a pyramidal neurons are vulnerable in primary motor cortex and other cortical areas of HD donors. Extensive -CAG expansions occur in vulnerable layer 5a pyramidal cells, and in Betz cells, layer 6a, layer 6b neurons that are resilient in HD. Retrograde tracing experiments in macaque brains identify the vulnerable layer 5a neurons as corticostriatal pyramidal cells. We propose that enhanced somatic -CAG expansion and altered synaptic function act together to cause corticostriatal disconnection and selective neuronal vulnerability in the HD cerebral cortex.