1. Academic Validation
  2. Recruitment and activation of caspase-8 by the Huntingtin-interacting protein Hip-1 and a novel partner Hippi

Recruitment and activation of caspase-8 by the Huntingtin-interacting protein Hip-1 and a novel partner Hippi

  • Nat Cell Biol. 2002 Feb;4(2):95-105. doi: 10.1038/ncb735.
François G Gervais 1 Roshni Singaraja Steven Xanthoudakis Claire-Anne Gutekunst Blair R Leavitt Martina Metzler Abigail S Hackam John Tam John P Vaillancourt Vicky Houtzager Dita M Rasper Sophie Roy Michael R Hayden Donald W Nicholson
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Merck Frosst Centre for Therapeutic Research, Pointe-Claire-Dorval, Quebec, Canada H9R 4P8.
Abstract

In Huntington disease, polyglutamine expansion of the protein Huntingtin (Htt) leads to selective neurodegenerative loss of medium spiny neurons throughout the striatum by an unknown apoptotic mechanism. Binding of Hip-1, a protein normally associated with Htt, is reduced by polyglutamine expansion. Free Hip-1 binds to a hitherto unknown polypeptide, Hippi (Hip-1 protein interactor), which has partial sequence homology to Hip-1 and similar tissue and subcellular distribution. The availability of free Hip-1 is modulated by polyglutamine length within Htt, with disease-associated polyglutamine expansion favouring the formation of pro-apoptotic Hippi-Hip-1 heterodimers. This heterodimer can recruit procaspase-8 into a complex of Hippi, Hip-1 and procaspase-8, and launch Apoptosis through components of the 'extrinsic' cell-death pathway. We propose that Htt polyglutamine expansion liberates Hip-1 so that it can form a Caspase-8 recruitment complex with Hippi. This novel non-receptor-mediated pathway for activating Caspase-8 might contribute to neuronal death in Huntington disease.

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