An Expanded CAG Repeat in Huntingtin Causes +1 Frameshifting

J Biol Chem. 2016 Aug 26;291(35):18505-13. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M116.744326. Epub 2016 Jul 5.

Abstract

Maintenance of triplet decoding is crucial for the expression of functional protein because deviations either into the -1 or +1 reading frames are often non-functional. We report here that expression of huntingtin (Htt) exon 1 with expanded CAG repeats, implicated in Huntington pathology, undergoes a sporadic +1 frameshift to generate from the CAG repeat a trans-frame AGC repeat-encoded product. This +1 recoding is exclusively detected in pathological Htt variants, i.e. those with expanded repeats with more than 35 consecutive CAG codons. An atypical +1 shift site, UUC C at the 5' end of CAG repeats, which has some resemblance to the influenza A virus shift site, triggers the +1 frameshifting and is enhanced by the increased propensity of the expanded CAG repeats to form a stem-loop structure. The +1 trans-frame-encoded product can directly influence the aggregation of the parental Htt exon 1.

Keywords: Huntington disease; aggregation; frameshifting; seeding; translation; translation regulation; trinucleotide repeat disease.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Exons*
  • Frameshift Mutation*
  • Humans
  • Huntingtin Protein* / chemistry
  • Huntingtin Protein* / genetics
  • Huntingtin Protein* / metabolism
  • Protein Structure, Secondary
  • Trinucleotide Repeat Expansion*

Substances

  • HTT protein, human
  • Huntingtin Protein