Localization of huntingtin-interacting protein-2 (Hip-2) mRNA in the developing mouse brain.

Journal: Journal Of Chemical Neuroanatomy
Published:
Abstract

Huntingtin-interacting protein-2 (Hip-2) was identified as a human protein specifically associated with huntingtin in vitro, a gene product affected in patients with Huntington disease (HD). It is a ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme identical to the previously characterized bovine E2-25k. We identified the mouse Hip-2 homologue (mHip-2) and examined its distribution patterns in the developing mouse brain in order to gain an insight into the functional significance of the Hip-2 protein in the normal brain as well as in the pathogenesis of HD. As reported with huntingtin, the mHip-2 mRNA expression developed in parallel with neuronal maturation and became distributed widely in the postnatal mouse brain. This spatiotemporal pattern of mHip-2 mRNA expression resembled that of huntingtin. We further demonstrated that mHip-2 mRNA was colocalized with huntingtin-like immunoreactivity in a single neuron. These findings suggested that the Hip-2 interacted with huntingtin in vivo and played an important role in HD pathogenesis.

Authors
Y Tanno, T Mori, S Yokoya, K Kanazawa, Y Honma, T Nikaido, J Takeda, M Tojo, T Yamamoto, A Wanaka