Recent evidence supports a role for RNA as a common pathogenic agent in both the 'polyglutamine' and 'untranslated' dominant expanded repeat disorders. One feature of all repeat sequences currently associated with disease is their predicted ability to form a hairpin secondary structure at the RNA level. In order to inves- tigate mechanisms by which hairpin-forming repeat RNAs could induce neurodegeneration, we have looked for alterations in gene transcript levels as hallmarks of the cellular response to toxic hairpin repeat RNAs. Three disease-associated repeat sequences-CAG, CUG and AUUCU-were specifically expressed in the neurons of Drosophila and resultant common transcriptional changes assessed by microarray analyses. Transcripts that encode several components of the Akt/Gsk3-β signalling pathway were altered as a consequence of expression of these repeat RNAs, indicating that this pathway is a component of the neuronal response to these pathogenic RNAs and may represent an important common therapeutic target in this class of diseases. © The Author 2011. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.
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van Eyk, C. L., O’Keefe, L. V., Lawlor, K. T., Samaraweera, S. E., McLeod, C. J., Price, G. R., … Richards, R. I. (2011). Perturbation of the akt/gsk3-β signalling pathway is common to Drosophila expressing expanded untranslated CAG, CUG and AUUCU repeat RNAs. Human Molecular Genetics, 20(14), 2783–2794. https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddr177
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