Open access · OA
via OpenAlex
Reactive astrocytes promote proteostasis in Huntington’s disease through the JAK2-STAT3 pathway
Laurene Abjean, Lucile Ben Haim, Miriam Riquelme‐Perez, Pauline Gipchtein, Céline Derbois, Marie-Ange Palomares, Fanny Petit, Anne‐Sophie Hérard, Marie‐Claude Gaillard, Martine Guillermier, Mylène Gaudin-Guérif, Gwennaëlle Aurégan, Nisrine Sagar, Cameron Héry, Noëlle Dufour
Brain · 2022 · ▲ 65 citations
Abstract
Huntington's disease is a fatal neurodegenerative disease characterized by striatal neurodegeneration, aggregation of mutant Huntingtin and the presence of reactive astrocytes. Astrocytes are important partners for neurons and engage in a specific reactive response in Huntington's disease that involves morphological, molecular and functional changes. How reactive astrocytes contribute to Huntington's disease is still an open question, especially because their reactive state is poorly reproduced in experimental mouse models. Here, we show that the JAK2-STAT3 pathway, a central cascade controlling astrocyte reactive response, is activated in the putamen of Huntington's disease patients. Selective activation of this cascade in astrocytes through viral gene transfer reduces the number and size of mutant Huntingtin aggregates in neurons and improves neuronal defects in two complementary mouse models of Huntington's disease. It also reduces striatal atrophy and increases glutamate levels, two central clinical outcomes measured by non-invasive magnetic resonance imaging. Moreover, astrocyte-specific transcriptomic analysis shows that activation of the JAK2-STAT3 pathway in astrocytes coordinates a transcriptional program that increases their intrinsic proteolytic capacity, through the lysosomal and ubiquitin-proteasome degradation systems. This pathway also enhances their production and exosomal release of the co-chaperone DNAJB1, which contributes to mutant Huntingtin clearance in neurons. Together, our results show that the JAK2-STAT3 pathway controls a beneficial proteostasis(definition) response in reactive astrocytes in Huntington's disease, which involves bi-directional signalling with neurons to reduce mutant Huntingtin aggregation, eventually improving disease outcomes.
◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:
Provenance
- Source
- OpenAlex
- DOI
- 10.1093/brain/awac068
- Canonical
- link ↗
- Fetched
- 2026-06-09 MST
Cite this
APA
Abjean, L., Haim, L.B., Riquelme‐Perez, M., Gipchtein, P., Derbois, C., Palomares, M., Petit, F., Hérard, A., Gaillard, M., Guillermier, M., Gaudin-Guérif, M., Aurégan, G., Sagar, N., Héry, C., Dufour, N., Robil, N., Kabani, M., Melki, R., Grange, P.D.L., & Bemelmans, A. (2022). Reactive astrocytes promote proteostasis in Huntington’s disease through the JAK2-STAT3 pathway. <em>Brain</em>. https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awac068
Vancouver
Abjean L, Haim LB, Riquelme‐Perez M, Gipchtein P, Derbois C, Palomares M, et al. Reactive astrocytes promote proteostasis in Huntington’s disease through the JAK2-STAT3 pathway. Brain. 2022. doi:10.1093/brain/awac068.
BibTeX
@article{laurene2022Reacti,
title = {Reactive astrocytes promote proteostasis in Huntington’s disease through the JAK2-STAT3 pathway},
author = {Laurene Abjean and Lucile Ben Haim and Miriam Riquelme‐Perez and Pauline Gipchtein and Céline Derbois and Marie-Ange Palomares and Fanny Petit and Anne‐Sophie Hérard and Marie‐Claude Gaillard and Martine Guillermier and Mylène Gaudin-Guérif and Gwennaëlle Aurégan and Nisrine Sagar and Cameron Héry and Noëlle Dufour and Noémie Robil and Mehdi Kabani and Ronald Melki and Pierre de la Grange and Alexis‐Pierre Bemelmans and Gilles Bonvento and Jean‐François Deleuze and Philippe Hantraye and Julien Flament and Éric Bonnet},
journal = {Brain},
year = {2022},
doi = {10.1093/brain/awac068},
}
Research neighborhood
References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.
Related findings
American Journal of Physiology-Cell Physiology 2016
Open access · CC-BY
Ubiquitin-dependent and independent roles of SUMO in proteostasis
npj Parkinson s Disease 2023
Open access · CC-BY
DOPAL initiates αSynuclein-dependent impaired proteostasis and degeneration of neuronal projections in Parkinson’s disease
Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience 2014
Open access · CC-BY
Proteostasis in striatal cells and selective neurodegeneration in Huntington’s disease
Journal of Neurochemistry 2010
Open access · OA
Nature and cause of mitochondrial dysfunction in Huntington’s disease: focusing on huntingtin and the striatum
Nature Communications 2018
Open access · CC-BY
The ubiquitin ligase UBR5 suppresses proteostasis collapse in pluripotent stem cells from Huntington’s disease patients
Frontiers in Neurology 2018
Open access · CC-BY