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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Gunawardena S, Her LS, Brusch RG, Laymon RA, Niesman IR, Gordesky-Gold B, Sintasath L, Bonini NM, Goldstein LS. Disruption of axonal transport by loss of huntingtin or expression of pathogenic polyQ proteins in Drosophila. Neuron. 2003 Sep 25;40(1):25-40. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: Huntington’s Protein Snarls Axonal Traffic

Comment by:  John Trojanowski, ARF Advisor
Submitted 2 October 2003  |  Permalink Posted 2 October 2003

These two reports from Scott Brady’s and Larry Goldstein’s laboratories are highly significant because they extend the concept that neurodegenerative disease is caused by impaired axonal transport, beyond more common disorders like Alzheimer's, to also include triplet-repeat diseases. The implication is that multiple neurodegenerative diseases may share a similar mechanism. This notion was proposed nearly 20 years ago by Carlton Gajdusek, but many years went by before sufficient technical advances occurred in AD research to provide circumstantial and experimental data supporting this view. Traction in this area began with the demonstration that tau (a microtubule binding protein) was the building block of AD neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs). Also helpful was the resolution of the controversy over the role of NFT formation in AD in 1991 by studies showing that abnormally phosphorylated CNS tau proteins (PHFtau) form the paired helical filaments in AD NFTs, and that excessive phosphorylation of PHFtau reduced its...  Read more
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REAGENTS/MATERIAL:

Fixed Drosophila larvae were analyzed for immunohistochemistry with synaptic vesicle markers anti-DSYT2 (Hugo Bellen) and anti-CSP (Konrad Zinsmaier). Anti-polyQ (Chemicon) and anti-HA (Roche and Santa Cruz) were used at 1:100. Embryos were fixed and stained with anti-polyQ.

Western blots were probed with the following antibodies: Anti-Drosophila p150Glued (Erika Holzbaur), anti-Drosophila DHC (Tom Hayes), anti-DIC (Chemicon), anti-Drosophila KHC (Bill Saxton), anti-Drosophila KLC, anti-HDAC3 (BD Bioscience), anti-Rab8 (BD Bioscience), anti-a-tubulin (Sigma), anti-actin (Boehringer Mannheim), anti-polyQ (Chemicon), and anti-HA (Roche)

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