ISB News

New Paper on Huntington’s Disease

Feb. 27, 2017

ISB researchers and colleagues from several institutes published a new study today in Human Molecular Genetics. The key points of the study “High resolution time-course mapping of early transcriptomic, molecular and cellular phenotypes in Huntington’s disease CAG knock-in mice across multiple genetic backgrounds” are:

  • A multi-institute collaboration mapped in high resolution the earliest effects of the Huntington’s disease mutation in mice.
  • The study included four different genetic strains of mice which allowed the researchers to observe differences in the rate of mutation-induced changes as a result of genetic background
  • Mapping early HD pathogenesis expands our understanding of early disease transitions and will inform other studies on proximal mechanisms and how to slow the disease process.

READ THE FULL SUMMARY

Recent Articles

  • Spotlight on ISB Education graphic

    2023-24 School Year ISB Education Highlights

    Each month throughout the 2023-2024 academic year, we will highlight some of the top projects the ISB Education team is working on. In March, ISB Education highlights include a paper published in a Nature Portfolio journal, two events for science/STEM leaders, and more.

  • STEM Program Models for Students from Historically Marginalized Communities

    A new study unveils important insights and actionable protocols into providing equitable STEM experiences for high school students from historically marginalized communities. The research highlights the transformative power of informal STEM learning and the ease with which many organizations could provide these opportunities.

  • Common Immune Response Protective Across Many Diseases

    Infection, autoimmunity and cancer account for 40 percent of deaths worldwide. In a Cell Reports paper, ISB researchers detail how the human immune system works in common ways across diseases – findings that offer promising avenues for exploring multi-disease therapeutic strategies.