hESC-based human glial chimeric mice reveal glial differentiation defects in Huntington disease
Description
Huntington’s disease (HD) is characterized by hypomyelination as well as neuronal loss. To assess the basis for myelin loss in HD, we generated bipotential glial progenitor cells (GPCs) from human embryonic stem cells (hESCs), derived from huntingtin (mHTT)-mutant embryos or normal controls, and performed RNAseq to assess mHTT-dependent changes in gene expression. In hGPCs derived from 3 mHTT hESC lines, transcription factors associated with glial differentiation and myelin synthesis were sharply down-regulated relative to normal hESC GPCs; NKX2.2, OLIG2, SOX10, MYRF and their downstream targets were all suppressed. Accordingly, when mHTT hGPCs were transplanted into hypomyelinated shiverer mice, the resultant glial chimeras were hypomyelinated; this defect could be rescued by forced expression of SOX10 and MYRF by mHTT hGPCs. The mHTT hGPCs also manifested impaired astrocytic differentiation, and developed abnormal fiber architecture. White matter involution in HD is thus a product of the cell autonomous, mHTT-dependent suppression of glial differentiation.