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Huntington's Disease

Huntington's Disease

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Genetics
  • Secondary to a mutation on the short arm of chromosome 4, in the HTT (aka IT15) gene: a CAG trinucleotide repeat, which encodes for the huntingtin protein.
    • It encodes a polyglutamine ('polyQ') stretch at the N-terminus of the huntingtin protein.
  • HD is an autosomal dominant disorder with significant genetic anticipation: the sequence length is unstable and can expand during meiosis, especially down paternal inheritance lines.
    • The anticipation helps us remember that this is a trinucleotide repeat disorder, specifically a CAG repeat disorder:
Classic trinucleotide repeat expansion disorders
  • Huntington's disease (CAG), myotonic dystrophy (CTG), and fragile X syndrome CGG) are the three classic trinucleotide repeat expansion disorders: the trinucleotide sequence is repeated many times in a row.
  • Additional CAG repeat disorders include: Kennedy's disease (aka X-linked spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy), spinocerebellar ataxia type 1 (SCA 1) and type 3 (SCA3, aka Machado-Joseph disease).
Pathology ("CAG" mneomnic)
  • We use the acronym CAG to highlight some key aspects of HD neuropathology:
    • On gross examination, there is caudate (C) and putamen (aka striatum) atrophy (A) with resultant anterior horn dilatation.
    • Accordingly, there is a loss of striatal GABAergic (G) medium spiny neurons, which is what primarily constitutes the striatum.
Mneomnic via Number 4
  • The HD gene is on chromosome 4
  • Greater than 40 CAG repeats is abnormal (but, truly, anything more than 36 can be symptomatic)
  • The average age of onset is 40 years-old but the longer the repeat length, the earlier the age of onset.
    • Onset younger than 20 years old, is referred to as Juvenile HD; it manifests with an akinetic-rigid syndrome, rather than chorea, referred to as the Westphal variant, which is typically the end-stage of HD in adults.
Clinical
  • HD is predominantly a neuropsychiatric and movement disorder.
  • It's often mistaken as alcoholism early on but ultimately becomes parkinsonian, later.
  • Typical survival from onset is 15 years, much like the timeline of degeneration in Parkinson's disease.
Key domains:
  • Psychiatric. Depression and anxiety, early, and obsessive/compulsive thoughts, profound apathy, and physical aggression, later. Note that suicide is the 2nd most common cause of death in HD.
  • Cognitive. Executive dysfunction, early, such as trouble with organizational tasks, planning, and task sequencing.
  • Simple abnormal involuntary movements: tics, dystonia, myoclonus.
  • Complex abnormal involuntary movements: Chorea (excessive movements that flow from body part to body part).
  • Failure of voluntary movements: Akinetic, rigid syndrome (parkinsonism).