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Brain-specific knock-out of hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha reduces rather than increases hypoxic-ischemic damage.

  • Rob Helton‎ et al.
  • The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience‎
  • 2005‎

Hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha (HIF-1alpha) plays an essential role in cellular and systemic O(2) homeostasis by regulating the expression of genes important in glycolysis, erythropoiesis, angiogenesis, and catecholamine metabolism. It is also believed to be a key component of the cellular response to hypoxia and ischemia under pathophysiological conditions, such as stroke. To clarify the function of HIF-1alpha in the brain, we exposed adult mice with late-stage brain deletion of HIF-1alpha to hypoxic injuries. Contrary to expectations, the brains from the HIF-1alpha-deficient mice were protected from hypoxia-induced cell death. These surprising findings suggest that decreasing the level of HIF-1alpha can be neuroprotective. Gene chip expression analysis revealed that, contrary to expectations, the majority of hypoxia-dependent gene-expression changes were unaltered, whereas a specific downregulation of apoptotic genes was observed in the HIF-1alpha-deficient mice. Although the role of HIF-1alpha has been extensively characterized in vitro, in cancer models, and in chronic preconditioning paradigms, this is the first study to evaluate the role of HIF-1alpha in vivo in the brain in response to acute hypoxia/ischemia. Our data suggest, that in acute hypoxia, the neuroprotection found in the HIF-1alpha-deficient mice is mechanistically consistent with a predominant role of HIF-1alpha as proapoptotic and loss of function leads to neuroprotection. Furthermore, our data suggest that functional redundancy develops after excluding HIF-1alpha, leading to the preservation of gene expression regulating the majority of other previously characterized HIF-dependent genes.


Huntingtin is required for normal excitatory synapse development in cortical and striatal circuits.

  • Spencer U McKinstry‎ et al.
  • The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience‎
  • 2014‎

Huntington's disease (HD) is a neurodegenerative disease caused by the expansion of a poly-glutamine (poly-Q) stretch in the huntingtin (Htt) protein. Gain-of-function effects of mutant Htt have been extensively investigated as the major driver of neurodegeneration in HD. However, loss-of-function effects of poly-Q mutations recently emerged as potential drivers of disease pathophysiology. Early synaptic problems in the excitatory cortical and striatal connections have been reported in HD, but the role of Htt protein in synaptic connectivity was unknown. Therefore, we investigated the role of Htt in synaptic connectivity in vivo by conditionally silencing Htt in the developing mouse cortex. When cortical Htt function was silenced, cortical and striatal excitatory synapses formed and matured at an accelerated pace through postnatal day 21 (P21). This exuberant synaptic connectivity was lost over time in the cortex, resulting in the deterioration of synapses by 5 weeks. Synaptic decline in the cortex was accompanied with layer- and region-specific reactive gliosis without cell loss. To determine whether the disease-causing poly-Q mutation in Htt affects synapse development, we next investigated the synaptic connectivity in a full-length knock-in mouse model of HD, the zQ175 mouse. Similar to the cortical conditional knock-outs, we found excessive excitatory synapse formation and maturation in the cortices of P21 zQ175, which was lost by 5 weeks. Together, our findings reveal that cortical Htt is required for the correct establishment of cortical and striatal excitatory circuits, and this function of Htt is lost when the mutant Htt is present.


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