Life Without Huntingtin

Abstract
Huntington disease (HD) is a neurodegenerative disorder associated with polyglutamine expansion in a recently identified protein, huntingtin. Huntingtin is widely expressed and plays a crucial role in development, because gene-targeted HD-/- mouse embryos die early in embryogenesis. To analyze the function of normal huntingtin, we have generated HD-/- embryonic stem (ES) cells and used an in vitro model of ES cell differentiation to analyze their ability to develop into neuronal cells. Expression analysis of wild-type ES cells revealed that huntingtin is expressed at all stages during ES cell differentiation with high expression in neurons. Expression levels increased with the maturation of differentiating neurons, demonstrating that expression of huntingtin is developmentally regulated in cell culture and resembles the pattern of expression observed in differentiating neurons in the mouse brain. It is interesting that HD-/- ES cells could differentiate into mature postmitotic neurons that expressed functional voltage- and neurotransmitter-gated ion channels. Moreover, both excitatory and inhibitory spontaneous postsynaptic currents were observed, indicating the establishment of functional synapses in the absence of huntingtin. These results demonstrate that huntingtin is not required for the generation of functional neurons with features characteristic of postmitotic neurons in the developing mouse brain.